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Edward O. Frantz is associate professor of history at the University of Indianapolis.
“Frantz provides what most American voters desperately need: a deeply grounded historical background study of how the ‘party of Lincoln’ became the ‘party of Reagan’ in our own time. Following all the Republican presidents from Hayes to Hoover on their southern tours, we learn how a sectional party rooted in Union victory and racial egalitarianism transformed over time into a party running against the very meaning of its own origins, while falsely claiming to still represent them. This is new political history of the very best kind and history that helps explain today's politics of white resentment as well as Republican disdain for the public sector and government itself.”—David W. Blight, author of American Oracle: The Civil War in the Civil Rights Era
“This innovative book takes on vital questions about the politics of sectionalism and race in post-Reconstruction America. No other historian has so thoroughly examined tours of the former Confederate states made by Republican presidents from Rutherford Hayes to Herbert Hoover. With skill and insight, Frantz explores how those trips contributed to Republicans’ evolving southern strategy and how a range of Americans—in the North and South, black and white—responded. The time is ripe for the fresh perspective that Frantz offers.”—Stephen A. West,
Catholic University of America
“What a poignantly and perfectly titled book this is. Edward Frantz recounts and analyzes how white northern Republicans pursued a ‘southern strategy’ starting nearly a century before Richard Nixon coined that phrase. They yearned to open a ‘door of hope’ to white votes in the former Confederacy. But that meant closing another ‘door of hope’ to African Americans who had voted Republican during Reconstruction and would have gladly continued to vote that way if they had not been disfranchised. It is a fascinating, heartbreaking story with much resonance to twenty-first-century American politics and race relations.”—John Milton Cooper Jr., E. Goron Fox Professor of American Institutions, Emeritus, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Conventional wisdom holds that the South shifted political allegiance during the administrations of Presidents Eisenhower, Nixon, and Reagan. Edward Frantz challenges this view by closely examining the complex and often contradictory rhetoric and symbolism utilized by Republican presidents from the end of the Civil War to the height of the Great Depression. He skillfully notes the common themes and questions posed during these years and finely crafts comparisons between the presidents’ speeches, strategies, and racial beliefs as they expressed the power dynamics undergirding the nation. He explores why and how the party of Lincoln—of emancipation—eventually triumphed in Dixie and why it remains the dominant political party in the former land of segregation.
Edward O. Frantz is associate professor of history at the University of Indianapolis.
A volume in the series New Perspectives on the History of the South, edited by John David Smith
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