At Freedom's Door

At Freedom's Door

African American Founding Fathers and Lawyers in Reconstruction South Carolina

  • Author: Underwood, James Lowell; Burke, Jr., W. Lewis; Foner, Eric
  • Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
  • ISBN: 9781570033575
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781643362359
  • Place of publication:  South Carolina , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2021
  • Month: March
  • DDC: 975.7004/96073/0922
  • Language: English

A telling reevaluation of African American roles in government and law during Reconstruction

At Freedom's Door rescues from obscurity the identities, images, and long-term contributions of black leaders who helped to rebuild and reform South Carolina after the Civil War. In seven essays, the contributors to the volume explore the role of African Americans in government and law during Reconstruction in the Palmetto State. Bringing into focus a legacy not fully recognized, the contributors collectively demonstrate the legal acumen displayed by prominent African Americans and the impact these individuals had on the enactment of substantial constitutional reforms—many of which, though abandoned after Reconstruction, would be resurrected in the twentieth century.

James Lowell Underwood, in a reexamination of the Constitutional Convention of 1868, recounts the critical role African American delegates played in the drafting of the state's first truly democratic constitution. In a pair of essays, J. Clay Smith and Belinda Gergel offer much new biographical information about Joseph Jasper Wright, the first African American to serve on a state supreme court bench. They discuss Wright's jurisprudence, approach to judicial decision making, role in the Dual Government Controversy of 1876, and coerced resignation from the court. In essays that explore the role of African American attorneys in South Carolina, W. Lewis Burke considers an all-but-forgotten phase in the history of the University of South Carolina Law School—the education and graduation of Black students in the 1870s—and John Oldfield sheds light on a law school administered by and for African Americans in post-Reconstruction South Carolina. Michael Mounter tells the story of Richard T. Greener, the first African American graduate of harvard and the first African American professor at the University of South Carolina. The eminent Reconstruction historian Eric Foner opens and concludes the volume by placing in national perspective the lives of these African Americans and the events in which they participated.

  • Cover
  • At Freedom's Door
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1 African American Founding Fathers The Making of the South Carolina Constitution of 1868
    • Appendix: Selected Roll-Call Votes
  • 2 "To Vindicate the Cause of the Downtrodden" Associate Justice Jonathan Jasper Wright and Reconstruction in South Carolina
  • 3 The Reconstruction of Justice Jonathan Jasper Wright
    • Appendix: Opinions by Justice Jonathan Jasper Wright, South Carolina Supreme Court, 1870–1877
  • 4 The Radical Law School The University of South Carolina School of Law and Its African American Graduates, 1873–1877
    • Appendix: University of South Carolina School of Law Students, 1868–1877
  • 5 The African American Bar in South Carolina, 1877–1915
    • Appendix: African American Lawyers in South Carolina, 1868–1900
  • 6 Richard Theodore Greener and the African American Individual in a Black and White World
  • 7 South Carolina's Black Elected Officials during Reconstruction
  • Notes
  • List of Contributors
  • Index

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

By subscribing, you accept our Privacy Policy