
Democracy Betrayed
Description
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At the close of the nineteenth century, the Democratic Party in North Carolina engineered a white supremacy revolution. Frustrated by decades of African American self-assertion and threatened by an interracial coalition advocating democratic reforms, white conservatives used violence, demagoguery, and fraud to seize political power and disenfranchise black citizens. The most notorious episode of the campaign was the Wilmington “race riot” of 1898, which claimed the lives of many black residents and rolled back decades of progress for African Americans in the state. Published on the centennial of the Wilmington race riot, Democracy Betrayed draws together the best new scholarship on the events of 1898 and their aftermath. Contributors to this important book hope to draw public attention to the tragedy, to honor its victims, and to bring a clear and timely historical voice to the debate over its legacy. The contributors are David S. Cecelski, William H. Chafe, Laura F. Edwards, Raymond Gavins, Glenda E. Gilmore, John Haley, Michael Honey, Stephen Kantrowitz, H. Leon Prather Sr., Timothy B. Tyson, LeeAnn Whites, and Richard Yarborough.
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Persons
David S. Cecelski, author of The Waterman’s Song: Slavery and Freedom in Maritime North Carolina, is the Lehman Brady Joint Chair Professor in Documentary and American Studies at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Timothy B. Tyson is senior scholar at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University and adjunct professor of American studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is author of Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story and Radio Free Dixie: Robert F. Williams and the Roots of Black Power.
Content
- Cover Page
- Democracy Betrayed
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Epigraph
- Introduction
- We Have Taken a City
- Abraham H. Galloway
- Murder, Memory, and the Flight of the Incubus
- The Two Faces of Domination in North Carolina, 1800-1898
- Captives of Wilmington
- Love, Hate, Rape, Lynching
- Class, Race, and Power in the New South
- Fear, Hope, and Struggle
- Race, Rhetoric, and Revolution
- Violence, Manhood, and Black Heroism
- Wars for Democracy
- Epilogue from Greensboro, North Carolina
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index
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