Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 334
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-1-4422-1498-9 • Hardback • December 2011 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-1-4422-1499-6 • Paperback • November 2016 • $39.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-1500-9 • eBook • December 2011 • $37.00 • (£30.00)
J. Michael Martinez is an attorney and author of numerous articles and four books, including Carpetbaggers, Cavalry, and the Ku Klux Klan: Exposing the Invisible Empire during Reconstruction.
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments
Prologue: "We Have the Wolf by the Ear"
1. “The Crimes of This Guilty Land Will Never Be Purged Away but with Blood”
2. “Mr. President, You Are Murdering Your Country by Inches”
3. “The Bondsman’s Two Hundred and Fifty Years of Unrequited Toil
Shall Be Sunk”
4. “An Ungrateful, Despicable, Besotted, Traitorous Man—An Incubus”
5. “The Progress of Evolution, from President Washington to President Grant,
Was Alone Evidence Enough to Upset Darwin”
6. “Radicalism Is Dissolving—Going to Pieces, but What Is to Take Its Place,
Does Not Clearly Appear”
7. “We Have Been, as a Class, Grievously Wounded, Wounded in the House of
Our Friends”
Epilogue: “We Wear the Mask That Grins and Lies”
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
In this unflinching portrait, personalities come alive; the policies, philosophies, visions, aspirations, and foibles of political leaders provide high drama as well as compelling history. This book is an important contribution to our understanding of the history of politics during a critical half century of changing race relations.
— Orville Vernon Burton, Clemson University
J. Michael Martinez, in Coming for to Carry Me Home, offers a sweeping yet incisive history of the politics of race in the tumultuous years between the rise of abolitionism and the advent of Jim Crow. The strength of Martinez’s narrative is the rich mixture of ways the author invites readers to feel the tensions and experience the ambiguities of known and unknown Americans who struggle with the nation’s most enduring moral dilemma.
— Ronald C. White Jr., author of A. Lincoln: A Biography
Martinez succeeds in his effort to place Lincoln and Radical Republicanism in a broad historical context. His background in law and political science are evident as the bulk of the book raises constitutional questions and examines political struggles, compromises, and legal batters in the Supreme Court that fundamentally affected U.S. race relations from 1830 to 1880. Martinez reminds us of the failures of Reconstruction and provides a political context for the period using sources that will be of benefit to future scholars.
— The Journal of African American History