TASK FORCE TO STUDY
THE HISTORY AND LEGACY OF SLAVERY IN MARYLAND
(Final Report) 1999/12/31
MdHR 991422

MdHR 991422, Image No: 306   Print image (40K)

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TASK FORCE TO STUDY
THE HISTORY AND LEGACY OF SLAVERY IN MARYLAND
(Final Report) 1999/12/31
MdHR 991422

MdHR 991422, Image No: 306   Print image (40K)

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abolitionist" response to an earlier, conservative historiography. Important studies in this response are: John Hope Franklin, Reconstruction After the Civil War (Chicago, 1961), Kenneth Stampp, The Kra of Reconstruction, 1865-1867 (New York, 1965); and Eric McKitrick; Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction (Chicago, 1960). 3 . Eric Foner Free Snilj Free Lahor3 Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party (New York, 1970). For a discussion of northern racial attitudes during Reconstruction see: C. Vann Woodward, "Seeds of Failure in Radical Race Policy," in Harold M. Hyman, ed , New Frontiers in American Reconstruction (Chicago, 1966), 125-147; William S. McFeely^ Yankee Stepfather: General O. O. Howard and the Freedmen (New Haven, 1968), 84-106; George M. Fredrickson, The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on A fro-American Character and Destiny3 1817-1914 (New York, 1971); Louis Gerteis, From Contraband to Freedmen: Federal Policy Toward Southern Rlacks3 1861-1865 (Westport Conn., 1973); Herman Belz, "The New Orthodoxy in Reconstruction Historiography," Reviews in American History, I (March, 1973), 106-113; Richard Paul Fuke, "A Reform Mentality: Federal Attitudes Toward Black Marylanders, 1864-1868,"