The Reconstruction of Georgia - Part 7
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Part 7

CONTEMPORARY PAMPHLETS.

A letter from Rufus B. Bullock to the chairman of the Ku Klux committee, Atlanta, 1871.

Address of the same to the people of Georgia, dated October, 1872.

Letter from the same "to the Republican Senators and Representatives who support the Reconstruction Acts," Washington, May 21, 1870.

HISTORICAL WORKS AND COMPENDIA.

_American Annual Cyclopaedia_. New York.

Avery, I. W., _History of Georgia_. New York, 1881.

Bancroft, F. A., _The Negro in Politics_. New York, 1885.

Clews, Henry, _Twenty-eight Years in Wall Street_. London, 1888.

c.o.x, S. S., _Three Decades of Federal Legislation_. Providence, 1886.

Dunning, W. A., _The Civil War and Reconstruction_. New York, 1898.

Fielder, H., _The Life and Times of Joseph E. Brown_. Springfield, Ma.s.s., 1883.

Hill, B. H., Jr., _The Life, Speeches and Writings of Benjamin H. Hill_.

Atlanta, 1891.

Lalor, J. J., _Cyclopaedia of Political Science_. New York, 1893.

Articles on Reconstruction, Georgia, and Ku Klux.

Poor, H. V., _Manual of the Railroads of the United States_. New York, published yearly.

Sherman, W. T., _Memoirs_. New York, 1875.

Stephens, Alex., _The War between the States_. Philadelphia, 1868-70.

Taylor, Richard, _Destruction and Reconstruction_. New York, 1893.

_Tribune Almanac_. New York.

Wilson, Henry, _History of the Reconstruction Measures_. Hartford, 1868.

Footnotes:

[1] Alex. Stephens, _The War Between the States_, vol. ii, p. 623; W. T.

Sherman, _Memoirs_, vol. ii, pp. 346-362.

[2] M. C. U., May 9, 1865.

[3] See the account of the gigantic relief operations of the federal army, A. A. C., 1865, p. 392.

[4] M. C. U., May 9, 1865.

[5] Letter from Joseph E. Brown to Andrew Johnson, dated May 20, 1865, in the Department of War, Washington. Brown was arrested on May 10. On May 8, upon surrendering the state troops to the federal general Wilson, he had been paroled. (The parole paper is in the above mentioned archives.) Hence the arrest was a violation of his parole. When Wilson entered into the parole engagement he had not been informed how his superiors would regard the summoning of the legislature. Immediately afterward he probably received orders from the central authorities to arrest Brown. He preferred obeying orders to observing his engagement.

[6] G. O. D. S., 1865, no. 63.

[7] See G. O. D. S., 1865, _pa.s.sim_. Also Savannah _Republican_, May 1, 2, 3, etc., 1865.

[8] Savannah _Republican_, July 4, 1865. See also James Johnson's proclamation of July 13, 1865, M. F. U. of same date.

[9] M. F. U., July 25, 1865.

[10] U. S. L., vol. 13, 760. The provisional governorship, it may be remarked, was characterized by the Secretary of War as "ancillary to the withdrawal of military force, the disbandment of armies, and the reduction of military expenditure by provisional [civil organizations] to take the place of armed force." The salaries of the provisional governors were paid from the army contingencies fund. See S. D., 39th Congress, 1st session, no. 26.

[11] U. S. L., vol. 13, p. 764.

[12] M. F. U., July 13, 1865; A. A. C., 1865, p. 394.

[13] M. F. U., August 15, 1865; A. A. C., _loc. cit._

[14] Letter from Brown to Johnson, dated May 20, 1865, archives of the Department of War, Washington.

[15] Letter from Johnson to Stanton dated June 3, 1865, in same archives.

[16] M. F. U., July 11, 1865.

[17] M. F. U., July 18. Savannah _Republican_, July 1 and 3.

[18] J. C., 1865, p. 3.

[19] J. C., 1865, p. 8.

[20] _Ibid._, pp. 17, 18.

[21] _Ibid._, p. 234. The ordinance to this effect was pa.s.sed only after a hard fight, and after a telegraphic warning from the President that if it failed the state would fail of restoration. See S. D., 39th Congress, 1st session, no. 26, p. 81.

[22] J. C., 1865, pp. 18 and 28.

[23] S. J., 1865-6, p. 3.

[24] S. D., 39th Congress, 1st session, no. 26, p. 95.

[25] S. L., 1865, p. 313.

[26] M. F. U., December 19 and 26, 1865.

[27] See Jenkins' message to the legislature, M. F. U., December 19, 1865.

[28] K. K. R., vol. 6, p. 320 (testimony of John B. Gordon).

[29] Report of Carl Schurz on conditions in the South, made in December, 1865. S. D., 39th Congress, 2d session, no. 2.

[30] Report of Carl Schurz on conditions in the South, made in December, 1863. S. D., 39th Congress, 2d session, no. 2.

[31] Art. v, sect. 1, -- 1.

[32] Art. ii, sec. 5, -- 5.

[33] S. L., 1865-66, p. 6.