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Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Booknotes: A Confederate in Congress

New Arrival:
A Confederate in Congress: The Civil War Treason Trial of Benjamin Gwinn Harris
by Joshua E. Kastenberg (McFarland, 2016).

From the publisher's description:
"In May 1865, the final month of the Civil War, the U.S. Army arrested and prosecuted a sitting congressman in a military trial in the border state of Maryland, though the federal criminal courts in the state were functioning. Convicted of aiding and abetting paroled Confederate soldiers, Benjamin Gwinn Harris of Maryland's Fifth Congressional District was imprisoned and barred from holding public office.

Harris was a firebrand--effectively a Confederate serving in Congress--and had long advocated the constitutionality of slavery and the right of states to secede from the Union. This first-ever book-length analysis of the unusual trial examines the prevailing opinions in Southern Maryland and in the War Department regarding slavery, treason and the Constitution's guarantee of property rights and freedom of speech."
The bibliography looks solid, with fairly extensive manuscript research and engagement with the secondary legal literature of the Civil War.

1 comment:

  1. Could be interesting to know how far the Union went in the military trials of civilians at the end of the war and what Stanton might have thought about reconstruction based on the unusual nature of a military arrest of a sitting congressman (odd that the big histories on the war have not looked into this case}

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