The Black Congressmen of Reconstruction: Death of Representation
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Description
During the 1870s, twelve African-Americans - more than half of whom had been enslaved the decade before - were elected to the U.S. Congress. These political pioneers symbolized the sky high hopes of millions of former slaves during the years right after the Civil War. It was a period that ended all too quickly. But it happened. Mo talks to Professor Henry Louis Gates, Reconstruction historian Eric Foner and a descendant of one of the pioneers.
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