After the Glory; The Struggles of Black Civil War Veterans

by Donald R. Shaffer

July 2004; 304 pages, 26 photographs, 6 x 9; Modern War Studies
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1328-1, $34.95

Winner Of The Peter Seaborg Award For Civil War Scholarship

After the Glory; The Struggles of Black Civil War Veterans by Donald R. Shaffer
After the Glory; The Struggles of Black Civil War Veterans
by Donald R. Shaffer

The heroics of black Union soldiers in the Civil War have been justly celebrated, but their postwar lives largely neglected. Donald Shaffer’s illuminating study shines a bright light on this previously obscure part of African American history, revealing for the first time black veterans’ valiant but often frustrating efforts to secure true autonomy and equality as civilians.

After the Glory shows how black veterans’ experiences as soldiers provided them for the first time with a sense of manliness that shaped not only their own lives but also their contributions to the African American community. Shaffer makes clear, however, that their postwar pursuit of citizenship and a dignified manhood was never very easy for black veterans, their triumphs frequently neither complete nor lasting.

Shaffer chronicles the postwar transition of black veterans from the Union army, as well as their subsequent life patterns, political involvement, family and marital life, experiences with social welfare, comradeship with other veterans, and memories of the war itself. He draws on such sources as Civil War pension records to fashion a collective biography–a social history of both ordinary and notable lives–resurrecting the words and memories of many black veterans to provide an intimate view of their lives and struggles.

Like other African Americans from many walks of life, black veterans fought fiercely against disenfranchisement and Jim Crow and were better equipped to do so than most other African Americans. They carried a sense of pride instilled by their military service that made them better prepared to confront racism and discrimination and more respected in their own communities. As Shaffer reveals, they also had nearly equal access to military pensions, financial resources available to few other blacks, and even found acceptance among white Union veterans in the Grand Army of the Republic fraternity.

After the Glory is not merely another tale of black struggles in a racist America; it is the story of how a select group of African Americans led a quest for manhood–and often found it within themselves when no one else would give it to them.

“A valuable and long-awaited work, After the Glory provides a powerful social history of race and gender. It is a saga of triumph and tragedy, of limited and ambiguous victories, of black men struggling to find true freedom in postwar America.”–John David Smith, editor of Black Soldiers in Blue: African American Troops in the Civil War Era

“A comprehensive and carefully researched portrait of black veterans in the postwar decades.”–James McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom

“A significant contribution to Civil War and African American history.”
Louis S. Gerteis, author of Civil War St. Louis

DONALD R. SHAFFER teaches history at the University of Northern Colorado. His writings have appeared in Civil War History and in the volumes Southern Families at War and Union Soldiers and the Northern Home Front.

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