Battle for the University of Alabama

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A01=William Warren Rogers
academic freedom post Civil War
Alabama Board of Education
Alabama campus after war
American history
anti-intellectualism
Author_William Warren Rogers
cadets
capstone
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Category=WQH
Civil War Era
confederacy
crimson tide
csa
DeForest Richards
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
flagship university
higher education in the Reconstruction South
Independent Monitor
KKK
Ku Klux Klan
lost cause
Matthew Maury
military academy
military education
Noah Cloud
political conflict Southern Universities
post-Confederacy
public education
radical Republicans
Reconstruction
Republicanism
roll tide
Ryland Randolph
Southern Democrats
Southern Education reform
southern heritage
southern history
Tuscaloosa
Tuscaloosa history education
University of Alabama
University of Alabama historical study
Vernon Vaughn
white supremacy
William Warren Rogers Jr. book

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817362003
  • Weight: 367g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Traces the little-known story of the bitter contest for the fate of the University of Alabama after the Civil War

In The Battle for the University of Alabama, William Warren Rogers Jr. gives a fascinating account of the fierce struggle over the nature of the University of Alabama after the Civil War. Union forces reduced the campus to ruins as the war ended, and the university did not reopen until 1869. In the interregnum, powerful forces shifted the trajectory of the school. Alabama Republicans authored an egalitarian state constitution that delivered oversight of the university to the Republican Party. That set the stage for turmoil and confrontation. This book tells the story of that conflict.

In the next few years, Democrats charged Republicans with turning the university into a “radical” institution. They alleged that a handful of unqualified individuals had gained faculty positions because of their political allegiance, which resulted in the university’s academic desecration. Professors were bitterly denounced in the state newspaper press and quite personally in Tuscaloosa. Administration of the university became part of the fratricidal political debate in the state. Political violence and questions concerning race, specifically the possible integration of the university, illuminated the controversies of the Reconstruction years. Many of these questions resonate even today.

This authoritative account sets events at the University of Alabama against the backdrop of what occurred at other state universities in the Reconstruction South. The University of North Carolina experienced controversy similar to Alabama’s. At the University of Georgia, however, calm prevailed. This story of the incendiary events at Alabama’s flagship university charts new ground and provides a revelatory look into the extraordinary partisanship that characterized the South after the Civil War.

William Warren Rogers Jr. is professor emeritus of history at the University of North Georgia. He is author of Reconstruction Politics in a Deep South State: Alabama, 1865–1874; A Scalawag in Georgia: Richard Whiteley and the Politics of Reconstruction; Confederate Home Front: Montgomery during the Civil War; and Black Belt Scalawag: Charles Hays and the Southern Republicans in the Era of Reconstruction.

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