The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, better known as the Freedmen's Bureau, was established in the spring of 1865 to help white and black Southerners make the transition from slavery to freedom, while securing the basic civil rights of the ex-slaves. It failed to accomplish
what its creators had hoped, but its history tells us much about why Northerners and Southerners, whites and blacks, approached Reconstruction in the way that they did and why that failure occurred. The Freedmen's Bureau: Reconstructing the American South after the Civil War is a succinct summary of the agency's history accompanied by key documents that illustrate Northern ideology, black expectations, and white Southern resistance. Topics of the day, including labor, education, violence,
politics, and justice place the federal agency within the larger context of post-Civil War history. |
| | "Cimbala presents a fast-paced, detail-oriented institutional history of the Freedmen's Bureau… Readers will walk away from Cimbala's account with a clear
understanding of the ideological parameters of the agency, its multifarious and complex undertakings, and the changing attitudes and expectations of the bureau men who worked on a daily basis to implement Reconstruction policies… Well-chosen documents from the bureau field office records, now available on microfilm from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), in particular, reveal the hopes of both former slaves and former masters as well as the constraints under which bureau
men operated at the local level." -- Mary Farmer-Kaiser, H-Net Reviews, November 2007
"… a balanced, succinct summary of the history of the Freedmen's Bureau that assesses its successes and shortcomings within the larger context of post-Civil War history. To his credit, the author fully engages the many controversial issues that surrounded this short-lived federal agency… Readers will find much to like in The Freedmen's Bureau." -- Jackie R. Booker, The South Carolina
Historical Magazine, January 2008
"Paul A. Cimbala is a recognized expert on the Freedmen's Bureau. As the author of the best of a clutch of recent state-level studies of this important agency, he is well equipped to provide the concise synthesis, grounded in a close acquaintance with the primary sources and a mastery of the secondary literature, that the exercise demands… the documents offer a revealing sample of the kinds of primary evidence on which our understanding of the
bureau's history is based… provides an excellent summary of what historians are currently thinking about the bureau. With its well-chosen collection of documents, it constitutes an attractive package." -- Robert Harrison, Journal of Southern History, Vol. 74, May 2008 |
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