
The Day Freedom Died
The Colfax Massacre, the Supreme Court, and the Betrayal of Reconstruction
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Narrado por:
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Jim Bond
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De:
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Charles Lane
In The Day Freedom Died, Charles Lane draws us vividly into this war-torn world with a true story whose larger dimensions have never been fully explored. Here is the epic tale of the Colfax Massacre, the mass murder of more than 60 black men on Easter Sunday, 1873, that propelled a small Louisiana town into the center of the nation's consciousness. As the smoke cleared, the perpetrators created a falsified version of events to justify their crimes.
But a tenacious Northern-born lawyer rejected the lies. Convinced that the Colfax murderers must be punished lest the suffering of the Civil War be in vain, U.S. Attorney James Beckwith of New Orleans pursued the killers despite death threats and bureaucratic intrigue - until the final showdown at the Supreme Court of the United States. The ruling that decided the case influenced race relations in the United States for decades.
An electrifying piece of historical detective work, The Day Freedom Died brings to life a gallery of memorable characters in addition to Beckwith: Willie Calhoun, the iconoclastic Southerner who dreamed of building a bastion of equal rights on his Louisiana plantation; Christopher Columbus Nash, the white supremacist avenger who organized the Colfax Massacre; William Ward, the black Union Army veteran who took up arms against white terrorists; Ulysses S. Grant, the well-intentioned but beleaguered president; and Joseph P. Bradley, the brilliant justice of the Supreme Court whose political and legal calculations would shape the drama's troubling final act.
©2008 Charles Lane (P)2008 Brilliance AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















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Unfortunately some of these issues still in 2022
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The story of the massacre is thrilling and full of heroes, villains and anti heroes. It would make a great movie. The legal chapters are no less exciting and provide a concise explanation of how Radical Republican efforts were thwarted by violence, votes, and legal wrangling of the Southern white supremacists.
I recommend this book highly, especially to people who want to know what happened after the Civil War but aren't ready to sit through an exhaustive history.
A Story That Had to Be Told
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Very detailed, fully developed, thoroughly researc
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If you could sum up The Day Freedom Died in three words, what would they be?
Great history readWhat was one of the most memorable moments of The Day Freedom Died?
Learning that Grant had to send troops in to Alabama so that elected officials could take office in 1870s. Similar to the integration of the University of Alabama in the 1960s. Attitudes are slow to change and history repeats itself.Have you listened to any of Jim Bond’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
NoWas this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
YesAny additional comments?
We know so much about the time leading up to the Civil War and the time of the Civil War but not as much about Reconstruction. This book put a personal face on that period and has given me greater respect for President Grant.Always Learn
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The narration if this book is a bit odd. The narrator has a good cadence to his story telling but at times quotes people in a weird voice trying to sound like a southerner I guess. However he sounds more like "FogHorn LegHorn" from old cartoons and it doesn't matter if the quoted person is white or black. Also (having grown up in central Louisiana) the narrator mispronounces Colfax and Rapides Parish through out the whole book.
still a good book
Betrayal at its worst
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