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Reviews for The Columbia Guide to African American History Since 1939

 The Columbia Guide to African American History Since 1939 magazine reviews

The average rating for The Columbia Guide to African American History Since 1939 based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2014-03-22 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Raemone Pierson
this would've perhaps been better if Snay had compared the Fenians to only either freedmen or southern whites. A comparative history of the three distinct groups ultimately leaves the Fenians on the outside looking in and seemingly very removed from the story of reconstruction because the tension between southern whites and freedpeople overshadow them.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-09-03 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 5 stars Tyler Cantwill
What struck me most as I read this in-depth biography of Ben Tillman, South Carolina governor, senator and one of the Jim Crow era's most significant legislators, was how detailed and well-researched it was. Given that it was written more than 70 years ago, Francis Butler Simkins must have relied on quite a bit of shoe-leather detective work to go through thousands of pages of Tillman's personal papers, the Congressional Record, newspaper articles covering several decades, etc. Simkins may have had an advantage in that he was from Edgefield, S.C., the same town as Tillman. Certainly, Simkins, who was born in 1897, when Tillman was at the beginning of his lengthy career in the U.S. Senate, knew many people who knew Tillman and were able to offer personal anecdotes. Simkins' work does a good job of showing Tillman's many contradictions: He was a populist who wrested power from the Bourbons and pushed for a greater voice for poor white males, yet he made sure any rights blacks might have acquired as a result of Reconstruction were erased. Tillman was largely self-educated and pushed for the creation of what would become Clemson University and Winthrop University, but his attitude toward blacks reinforced a divisiveness that would continue to poison the state long after his death in 1918. At the time of his demise, Tillman was considered the second most influential legislator in state history after John C. Calhoun, having, among other things, led the Constitutional Convention of 1895 that resulted in the state constitution still in use in the South Carolina today, and being crucial in the establishment of the Charleston Naval Base, which operated from 1901 through 1996. Yet today he is largely known for his bigoted views and nasty racial remarks. Simkins' book presents a good, wide ranging look at Tillman, both the good and the bad.


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