Appears to involve only the south. But many in the United States also have their eyes on the west. Todays speaker will explore the connections between reconstruction policies to the American South and the American West after the end of the civil war. Congressional republicans had an environmental view of citizenship, desiring to turn both freed africanamericans and indians into Small Farmers. Each group, many white americans believed, would be loyal to the government until the soil and till the soil based on a northern agricultural model. Adam dean is an assistant professor of history at lynchburg college, specializing in slavery, the american civil war, and reconstruction. He received a ba from the university of california los angeles, ma and phd in 19 century history from the university of virginia under the direction of gary gallagher. Gallagher, who will be here to speak. Adams scholarship focuses on using insights from environmental and social history to answer longstanding questions about the long civil war and its era. His first book, agrarian republic, farming, antislavery politics, and nature parks in the civil war era, was published by the university of North Carolina press in february 2015. Hes also published articles in Civil War History in our own virginia magazine of history and biography. In 2009, he had an article entitled who controls the tax controls the future, virginia textbook controversy, won our annual award for the best article that year. Hes currently at work on his next project about the study of white southern unions during reconstruction. Please join me in a warm vhs welcome to adam dean. [applause] adam good afternoon. Thank you so much for coming to hear me speak today. Its been unusually rainy this may. I would like to begin by thanking all the great folks at the Virginia Historical society and the dispatch for sponsoring this talk. I really feel that the vhs is a gem i have not seen in any other state that ive been to. To begin, 150 years after the civil war, virginia prepared for another campaign. The commonwealth called this one civil war 150. Understanding our past, embracing our future. At the conclusion in 2015, of the various remembrance activities and tourism promotion, a study found that the various sesquicentennial activities brought in more than 290 million tourist dollars to the state, and generated more than eight point or million 8. 4 million in state tax revenue. As an 11 year resident of the commonwealth and as a historian, i cannot help but view this as a success, with one caveat. That is, at the conclusion of the study in august of 2015, there are no new posts on the civil war 150 website, with mary a mention of reconstruction. Nary a mention of reconstruction. It is my opinion that the outcome of the civil war, that is, union victory, determined only two things. First, that the United States would stay together, and second, that legal slavery would he abolished. That is it. Reconstruction would determine other questions. Would confederate officers and the leaders of secession be punished for what many northerners viewed as treason . What exactly did freedom mean for the 4 million black southerners who escaped bondage because of the war . On what terms would be seceded states rejoin the union . With the social and economic structure of the defeated confederacy change . What would become of the American West . I think we sometimes forget that the question over whether slavery would exist in places even in my home state of utah, new mexico, california, kansas and nebraska, had done much to bring on the war. Now that the union had won, how would these new places be governed . So today i went to suggest that understanding reconstruction is just as critical as understanding the causes, the course, and the outcome of the civil war itself. In many ways, reconstruction did just as much to shape the future of the United States as the war itself. How one should understand reconstruction is the subject of my talk today. The first point that i would like to make about reconstruction is that contrary to what you might have heard, the north this is a constant struggle for my students to find what is the north, but for the purposes of today, i would like to define the north as the states that simply supported the union during the war. They did not want to industrialize the south. Instead and this is one of the main contentions of my book agriculture characterized the world of northerners. Even excluding california and oregon at the time, both overwhelmingly rural, 72 of those who lived in the free states were rural, had rural occupations. Most were farmers or laborers, lived in rural areas. Only in rhode island and massachusetts did less than 50 of the population live in rural areas. These people lived, by and large, on small farms. The average farm size was 113 acres in rural new york and pennsylvania. 125 in todays upper midwest, and 169 in areas beyond the mississippi. What does that all mean . It means that agrarian values defined northerners. And in particular, the Republican Party, which was always more popular in rural areas than it was in urban states, which were the strongholds of the democrats. The second point i would like to convey is that by the 1850s, many northerners adopted the ideal of farming a small plot of land for multiple generations. What was the word for this at the time, agricultural permanence. In other words, by using techniques that can serve the soil, people can stay on the same tract of land for many years. They did not have a modern environmentalist view that conserving the soil was a good thing for the earth. They thought it was a good thing for society. If you were able to farm the same plot of land for multiple years, you could build a stable community, and yeomannery ideal for lower case r, republican government. When the Republican Party got established in madison, wisconsin in 1854, the selection of the name republican was intentional. In the early 1800s, Thomas Jefferson referred to his Political Coalition as the democratic republicans or republicans for short. When the party got established in the 1850s, they selfconsciously embraced jeffersons ideas about agriculture and the importance of a human re yeomannery republican government. Republicans believe that killing the soil or multiple generations tilling the soil for multiple generations on small arms created progress, or to use the language of time, civilization. They also connected small farming to an idea that historians have long recognized as critical to understanding the civil war, and that is the concept of union. The union meant republican government itself great while they were always quick to advertise their ties to jefferson and political propaganda and speeches, even their namesake, they differed from jefferson in some critical ways. Republicans opposed, unlike jefferson, the extension of slavery westward. That was their whole reason for existence. They believed that slave taste agriculture destroyed based agriculture destroyed the soil, creating what they called barbarism and constant western movement in search of new land. Third, once republicans wrested control of reconstruction from Andrew Johnson, they applied these exact ideas, connecting land use social structure to both the south and the west after the war. Improving the soil through hard work, scientific knowledge, and agricultural permanence was one key republicans believed to healing a divided nation. They also believed that small landholders, rather than large plantations or planters, would prove to be the most loyal to the union. And, they applied to these ideas in both the south and in the west. Republicans argued that forcing indians to become small armors farmers would open up more land for whites and help civilize, in their words, resisting tribes. This is exactly what they thought should happen with the south, the big land stations of the south needed to be broken up and redistributed to former former slaves and white unionists so that a loyal yeomannery could form in the south. Think about this. In my world, of academics, this is a pretty significant contention. Why historians generally treat land distribution in the south as one of reconstructions lost moments, where things could have happened differently. This dates back to perhaps one of the most famous historians, the black intellectual w. E. B. Dubois. But historians seem to act as if federal indian policy during reconstruction and afterwards is completely different, unconnected. In my opinion is that the same ideology was at the foundation of both efforts. Citizenship for both africanamericans and indians during reconstruction upon their exceptions acceptance of angloamerican culture, religion, and land use ideals. Lets begin talking about reconstruction itself. Reconstruction formally began not after the war, that in december of 1863, during the war, after the u. S. Had and control of most of tennessee, arkansas, and louisiana. That or rename, reconstruction, comes from president lincolns proclamation of amnesty and reconstruction, which in december of 1863 offered a full pardon and restoration of all property except slaves to any confederate who would swear allegiance to the United States and recognize all legislative and executive orders pertaining to slavery. When 10 of the 1860 voting population accepted those terms, that state could establish a governmentrecognized by the United States. This plan was mostly formed in wartime contingencies. President lincoln believed a less burdensome reconstruction would end the conflict sooner, giving confederates less to fight for, and maintaining the loyalty of some slave states that had stayed within the union like kentucky, which were very much opposed to any bigger social change. Things changed in november of 1864, an election year. The Republican Party won stunning and commanding majorities in the house and senate. And lincoln earned a second term. Also that time in the war, the outcome seemed to be pointing towards a union victory. And thus, priorities for reconstruction shifted. The republicans who won election identified the slaveholding elites as the cause of war. For them, victory meant not only defeating the confederacy on the battlefield, but changing the social structure of the south to ensure that there was not another conflict. The performance of black soldiers in the u. S. Army, and the impending destruction of slavery, raise the question of whether black people should be citizens in postwar society. The first indication, or one indication, of what republicans and lincoln wanted the south to be got unveiled in the creation of the Freedmens Bureau in march 1865. This was the First FederalGovernment Agency of its kind devoted to promoting education, rebuilding, and poverty relief. But something this is really unfortunate, in my opinion, that is often not taught about the Freedmens Bureau, is that part of its job was to lease, quote, confiscated and abandoned lands, end quote, to former slaves. Giving them the option to buy 40 acres of such land at the end of three years. The notion tied indirectly to what many northerners thought the postwar south should look like. It should be an Agricultural Society of Small Farmers. Charles sumner of massachusetts explained, quote, the freedmen, for weary generations, have her lies these lands with their fertilized these lands with their sweat. The time has come that they should enjoy the results of their labor for at least a few months. End quote. A close confidence of many politicians, a female author and abolitionist named lydia maria child, wrote too many politicians expressing the intense of the law. She stated, quote, the old satanic fire will long remain in the ashes of the rebellion. If those tyrannical oligarchs have their lands monopoly restored, they will trample on the blacks in the poor whites as of old. Those mammoth plantations on to be divided into small farms and an allotted number of acres given to soldiers, white and black, end quote. The fact that Abraham Lincoln supported and side this will to law gives some insight into how his ideas about reconstruction changed, though he was always famously cryptic on what exactly he wanted, and on april 11, 1865, lincoln gives the final speech of his administration. In it he openly endorsed black voting, leading one person in the audience, john wilkes booth, to assassinate him three days later on april 14, 1865, putting Vice PresidentAndrew Johnson in the white house. Johnsons reconstruction hall was different. The issue two proclamations on may 29, 1865. First, restored Property Rights with some exemptions to those who pledged loyalty to the union, and act we essence and emancipation, and the second outlined a reconstruction plan for north airliner. The thinking being it starts in North Carolina, would go to other states after thats. Here johnson appointed a provisional governor to create a new government and enrolled voters to create a new constitution. Critically, the voters included people who were on the list only before may 20, 1861, the date of secession. And who agreed to a loyalty oath. Are there any black people on the south, on the voting rolls prior to may 20, 1861 . Possibly. Basically none in the state california. This was confining suffrage writ large to white men in the south. Northern visitors to the south in the months after these proclamations were often deeply critical of the president s policies and suggested a broader reconstruction that remade the south in the image of the small farming communities of the north. These visitors associated large landholdings with the lease tossed to the union and sparing the slaveholding expansion that brought on the war. They believed that the soil itself, the southern economy, and Southern Society would become more productive and loyal if tended by Small Farmers. Let me share with you a few telling observations, though theres any more in my book. Visiting virginia, he argued that slavery had a disastrous impact on the land. In richmond, he wrote that he had quote, past the same desolate scene which i had everywhere observed since i set foot upon the soil of virginia. Old fields and under groups, with signs of human life so feeble and so few that one began to wonder where the country population of the old dominion was to be found,. He reported being amazed that quote, the petty and shiftless system of farming witnessed around the city, end quote. Trowbridge quoted a native white southerner as a way of offering a solution. The man said, the way it generally is, a few own too much and the rest own nothing. I know hundreds of thousands of acres of land put to no use. Which, if it were cut up into little farms, would make the country look touristy, end quote. The prescribed solutions went down to specific crops. Quote, i found the land worn out, night like nearly all the land in the country. The way virginia folks have spoiled their form. First there was timber, they burnt it off and put a good coat of ashes on the soil. Then they raised tobacco three or four years, then corn, till the soil ran out and they could not raise anything. It was like giving rum to an exhausted man. Sydney andrews, a newspaper reporter from illinois, displayed similar ideas about proper landuse. I find it quote, very suggestive. He visited western North Carolina, which was unionist during the war, and he seemed to connect that loyalty to the union with the landuse in that part of the state. Quote, western North Carolina is suggestive of pennsylvania. It abounds in small arms rather than large plantations, and corn, not cotton, is the principal product. There are apple orchards and many peach trees, some fences, and occasionally a comfortably situated farmhouse. End quote. I like how he had to add occasionally. 26yearold harvard law graduate john richard did a was equally evocative. Many men in virginia, he said, quote, owned 5000 and 6000 acres of land. If only these half their tracks could be broken up into small farms, the soil would yield a product fourfold greater than now. The next sentence is even more telling. As a result, an intelligence and industrious yeomanry composed of colored virginians could become the new leaders. Northern visitors to the west, exact tame same time, would have similar suggestions. Some Background Information is necessary. During the civil war itself, several events occurred in the west that pointed towards the necessity for change in indian policy after the war. The first of which was that there was a war within a war, that the tutor the dakota sioux went to war with the u. S. Government between august and december 1862 in minnesota over treaty violations and the failure of the government to provide this resulted in a defeat of the sioux and a mass hanging of 38 leaders of the sioux. A more infamous event occurred in november of 1864, known as the sand creek massacre. Units of the first colorado cavalry attacked a group of peaceful era paco indians arapahoe indians. How do they know they were peaceful . They were capped outside of the camped outside of the fort, raising an American Flag and white flag. The mass murder that resulted was indicative that some whites in the United States were willing to resort to genocide one newspaper reported, quote, unborn babes were torn from the wombs of dying mothers and scalped. Children of the most tender ages were butchered, soldiers at war and their hats with the portions of the bodies of both males and females, end quote. So once the war ended and news of these events filtered eastward, there was a massive debate and washington, d. C. About indian policy. While the indians themselves were rarely consulted, the debate seemed to be between western politicians who advocated for what can only be c