The Children of Lincoln: White Paternalism and the Limits of Black Opportunity in Minnesota, 18601876
English
By (author): William D. Green
How white advocates of emancipation abandoned African American causes in the dark days of Reconstruction, told through the stories of four Minnesotans
White people, Frederick Douglass said in a speech in 1876, were the children of Lincoln, while black people were at best his stepchildren. Emancipation became the law of the land, and white champions of African Americans in the state were suddenly turning to other causes, regardless of the worsening circumstances of black Minnesotans. Through four of these children of Lincoln in Minnesota, William D. Greens book brings to light a little known but critical chapter in the states history as it intersects with the broader account of race in America.
In a narrative spanning the years of the Civil War and Reconstruction, the lives of these four Minnesotans mark the eras most significant moments in the state, the Midwest, and the nation for the Republican Party, the Baptist church, womens suffrage, and Native Americans. Morton Wilkinson, the states first Republican senator; Daniel Merrill, a St. Paul business leader who helped launch the first Black Baptist church; Sarah Burger Stearns, founder and first president of the Minnesota Woman Suffragist Association; and Thomas Montgomery, an immigrant farmer who served in the Colored Regiments in the Civil War: each played a part in securing the rights of African Americans and each abandoned the fight as the forces of hatred and prejudice increasingly threatened those hard-won rights.
Moving from early St. Paul and Fort Snelling to the Civil War and beyond, The Children of Lincoln reveals a pattern of racial paternalism, describing how even enlightened white Northerners, fatigued with the Negro Problem, would come to embrace policies that reinforced a notion of black inferiority. Together, their livesso differently and deeply connected with nineteenth-century race relationscreate a telling portrait of Minnesota as a microcosm of America during the tumultuous years of Reconstruction.
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