“Broader contextual issues aside, 1865 Alabama unequivocally demands to be taken seriously as a landmark in Alabama’s historical scholarship. The book is a thoroughly researched, artfully presented, and timely edition to the state’s historiographical record. The era of its focus is one of the least trod historical grounds in Alabama’s rich history, and McIlwain currently stands among the leaders in its interpretation. Anyone wanting to know about Alabama’s Civil War and Reconstruction experience must reckon with this book.”
—The Alabama Review
“Clearly, the first months of ‘peace’ in Alabama, McIlwain concludes, set the tone for the state's economic, political, and social evolution even to the present day. Judging from the convincing arguments herein presented, this lawyer has won his case.”
—Civil War Times
“One of the most interesting and provocative studies of a Confederate state that has appeared in recent years. McIlwain presents an impressive amount of fresh research and information that advances a number of striking and controversial interpretations.”
—George C. Rable, author of God’s Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious History of the American Civil War
“McIlwain has produced an engaging, often witty, and always informative study of the development of Reconstructionist thought in Alabama. This is a topic that has only recently garnered serious attention, and so McIlwain stands as one of its pioneers.”
—Ben H. Severance, author of Portraits of Conflict: A Photographic History of Alabama in the Civil War and Tennessee’s Radical Army: The State Guard and Its Role in Reconstruction, 1867–1869