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Dr. Clyde N. Wilson

A Short History of the South, Part 4

11/16/2025

7 Comments

 
Picture
“Reconstruction,” 1865-1877


Through most of the 20th century, American historians of every stripe (except Communists) agreed that “Reconstruction” was an ugly period in our history - a regime of corruption, tyranny, bad leadership, and dangerous deviation from American principles. Honest historians found a vast treasury of evidence for this interpretation that is available but now ignored.


The most celebrated historians now present Reconstruction as a noble effort to establish equality for African Americans that failed because of violence by the supposed Southern ruling class. The standard Marxist theory of class conflict prevails.


It is worth noting that the term “Reconstruction” does not have any relation to rebuilding the South devastated by war. It refers to “reconstructing” of “the Union” on Republican Party terms.


Southerners white and black were left to rebuild a society as best they could in a land of unprecedented poverty and disruption. It is notable that hostility between black and white Southerners was not caused by the war. In the first period after the war relations were largely friendly. White Southerners accepted emancipation in good faith and often with relief. They were genuinely grateful that there had been no significant slave revolt during the war. Cooperative efforts were under way to restore economic life.


This peaceful period ended when the Republican Congress enacted Presidential Reconstruction in 1868 and dismissed Andrew Johnson’s efforts for a gentler policy. That policy (supposedly favoured by Lincoln) lacked much, resting upon restoring a State to the Union when 10% of voters swore loyalty to the U.S. government, not exactly democracy, but it was a peaceful way forward.


Presidential Reconstruction turned the Southern States into Military Districts where a general’s writ was supreme over any civil authority. Imagine: the great Commonwealth of Virginia was now Military District no. 1! Most Americans remain unaware that a large part of the country was under military occupation for a decade. President Grant was a virtual dictator over the people of the Southern States and regularly sent the army to protect corrupt regimes.


White Southerners were deprived of the vote and citizenship. Republicans appeared and organized and armed the black population with secret meetings and oaths, encouraging them to provocations against real law and order. Racial hostility was deliberately created by outsiders.


Southerners were faced with trying to restore a devastated economy. Local and state government was under control of unsavory outsiders (carpetbaggers) who taxed and looted. Quite often carpetbaggers were people who had left their Northern States under indictment.


Elections were coerced and fraudulent. The defenders of Reconstruction argue that the Reconstruction regimes instituted progressive measures new to the backward South like public schools. Nice, except nearly all the money was robbed by Republican officials, many of whom became rich on looted funds. Republican officials made millions on corrupt “railroad” bonds.


South Carolina did not finish paying off those fraudulent bonds until 1955.

The Southern economy as a whole did not really begin to recover some prosperity until World War I, and today income remains below the rest of the Union. The African Americans in the end got nothing from Reconstruction except a temporary franchise and some minor graft for a selected few.


Though the Southern States were not States but military districts, they were required to ratify the 14th Amendment before they could be readmitted to the Union as States.. It would not have been ratified without the controlled Southern States. The 14th Amendment has been the source of continuing damage to the Constitution and American society and it was never legally ratified, a great and lasting legacy of “Reconstruction.”
​

The current interpretation is that a noble egalitarian reform of the South was defeated by white Southern violence. It is never mentioned who initiated violence. This is a fraudulent interpretation because there never was any Northern commitment to equality for the black people of the South. That is imaginary. The Northern stand was to use the blacks to maintain power and keep them out of the North and West. The point of “Reconstruction” was to keep the Republican party in power and provide loot for its well-connected.
​

Reconstruction ended when the last occupying troops were withdrawn in 1877. Republicans realised that electoral votes from new Western States made their rule safer and that carpetbaggers had become so corrupt that they were fighting among themselves for the spoils and could no longer be supported by the army.

7 Comments
Joseph Johnson
11/17/2025 01:48:49 am

Dr. Wilson, not only was the 14th amendment not legally ratified, it was and is a violation of the Constitution.

Reply
Paul Yarbrough
11/17/2025 03:09:15 pm

Which opened the door to nationalism
1. 15th amendment (intimating a "right" to vote)
2. 16th Amendment ( right of government to seize any or all property)
3. Forming states as no more than counties

Reply
Paul Yarbrough
11/17/2025 03:11:10 pm

#3 should be referenced as 17th amendment

Paul yarbrough
11/17/2025 03:02:52 pm

Dr, Wilson,
I have actually heard commentators posing as conservatives on such outlets as Fox, suggest that we need to do more tp "reconstruct" the South. The shabby sawbones Dr. Drew for one.

Reply
GENERAL KROMWELL
11/25/2025 06:37:27 am

Let’s file a federal lawsuit. I’m being serious.

The newly elected attorney general of Virginia has called for our executions and the executions of our children. I have called law enforcement in Virginia to report him. I have also stated that my right to safe travel throughout Virginia is in jeopardy and the attorney general violating my constitutional rights. The people on the phone just hang up on me.

I suggest we here at the Abbeville Institute file a federal lawsuit against the incoming attorney general of Virginia. In being serious. With our real names. His comments make it unsafe to travel through the State of Virginia.

Who here wants to file this lawsuit with me? We have standing because of the 14th Amendment. We don’t have to citizens of the State of Virginia. I feel unsafe traveling through Virginia when the head law enforcement official openly advocates my murder and the murder of my children.

Who here will file a federal lawsuit with me?

We have the right to safe travel throughout Virginia.

Reply
GENERAL KROMWELL
11/25/2025 06:38:44 am

Many people who support the American government need the Martin Gary and IRA treatment.

Reply
William Smith
11/27/2025 06:37:21 am

SIGH!!!

Thanks, as ever, Dr. Wilson, for continuing to educate us in our history! Prior to the Army Chaplaincy, I was a history teacher, having majored in that subject in my undergraduate studies - my academic first love! I learned a great deal at the knees of beloved elders in my family, thankfully, who still loved their people and place (Middle Tennessee), but how I wish I'd had a professor in college like yourself for my formal education!

At any rate, writings like this one teach me more fully about the wrong that was done to us back then, and of the wrong that continues to be perpetrated, even to this very day! My Christian faith teaches me that I must forgive my enemy, and not give in to self-destructive bitterness and resentment; however, I think I need to know how deeply he has wronged me in order to be fully aware of exactly what I am forgiving. Further, despite the popular understanding that forgiveness is synonymous with excusing - totally erroneous! - I must insist that the abusive behaviour against me cease! Or at the very least, I must refuse to submit to it!

It is my fervent prayer that revival take place across this land, but especially among our Southern people, along with an accompanying love for and sense of who we are.

Thanks yet again, sir!

Reply



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    Author

    Clyde Wilson is a distinguished Professor Emeritus of History at the University of South Carolina He is the author or editor of over thirty books and published over 600 articles, essays and reviews

    Dr. Wilson is also is co-publisher of Shotwell Publishing, a source  for unreconstructed Southern books. 

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