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112 Colum. L. Rev. 1585 (2012)
The Supreme Court and the History of Reconstruction - And Vice-Versa

handle is hein.journals/clr112 and id is 1653 raw text is: PANEL II: RECONSTRUCTION
REVISITED
THE SUPREME COURT AND THE HISTORY OF
RECONSTRUCTION-AND VICE-VERSA
Eric Foner*
Beginning in the 1930s, Reconstruction historiography underwent
a dramatic change. Early-twentieth-century historians of Reconstruction
viewed aggressive federal intervention to protect the civil rights of freed
slaves as a mistake, and they celebrated the Compromise of 1877 and the
subsequent retreat from Reconstruction. These historians also praised the
decisions of the Supreme Court that offered narrow interpretations of
Congressional power under the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth
Amendments.
Modern    historians reject the works of   early  historians  of
Reconstruction as incomplete, unbalanced, and often racist. Beginning
with WE.B. Du Bois in the 1930s, revisionist historians have
reexamined the Reconstruction Era and developed a narrative that
praises the Republicans who sought to protect the rights of freed slaves
and the freed slaves themselves, who fought for civil and political rights
during Reconstruction and its aftermath. Unfortunately, the legal pro-
fession and the courts have been slow to embrace the revolution in
Reconstruction historiography.
This Essay argues that a historical narrative of Reconstruction re-
pudiated by historians continues to exert an outsized influence on
Supreme Court jurisprudence, and that judicial unwillingness to over-
turn flawed Reconstruction-era precedents hinders the cause of equality
before the law even today. It suggests that the overdue judicial repudia-
tion of precedents resting, in part, on a faulty interpretation of
Reconstruction's history would have a salutary effect on the Supreme
Court's Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendment jurisprudence.
Reconstruction was a period of profound change in all aspects of
American life. The fundamental question that agitated the country in the
period after the Civil War was how our society would respond to the de-
struction of slavery. What system of labor would replace slave labor? What
* Dewitt Clinton Professor of History, Columbia University. The author thanks
Professor Randall Kennedy of the Harvard Law School and Linda Tvrdy, a graduate stu-
dent in the Columbia University Department of History, for many helpful discussions of
the issues raised in this Essay. The author would also like to thank the editors and staff of
the Columbia Law Review for their revisions.

1585

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