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The Lost Indictment of Robert E. Lee

The Forgotten Case against an American Icon

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
History has been kind to Robert E. Lee. Woodrow Wilson believed General Lee was a "model to men who would be morally great." Douglas Southall Freeman, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his four-volume biography of Lee, described his subject as "one of a small company of great men in whom there is no inconsistency to be explained, no enigma to be solved." Winston Churchill called him "one of the noblest Americans who ever lived." Until recently, there was even a stained glass window devoted to Lee's life at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.
Immediately after the Civil War, however, many northerners believed Lee should be hanged for treason and war crimes. Americans will be surprised to learn that in June of 1865 Robert E. Lee was indicted for treason by a Norfolk, Virginia grand jury. In his instructions to the grand jury, Judge John C. Underwood described treason as "wholesale murder," and declared that the instigators of the rebellion had "hands dripping with the blood of slaughtered innocents." In early 1866, Lee decided against visiting friends while in Washington, D.C. for a congressional hearing, because he was conscious of being perceived as a "monster" by citizens of the nation's capital. Yet somehow, roughly fifty years after his trip to Washington, Lee had been transformed into a venerable American hero, who was highly regarded by southerners and northerners alike. Almost a century after Appomattox, Dwight D. Eisenhower had Lee's portrait on the wall of his White House office.
The Lost Indictment of Robert E. Lee tells the story of the forgotten legal and moral case that was made against the Confederate general after the Civil War. The actual indictment went missing for 72 years. Over the past 150 years, the indictment against Lee after the war has both literally and figuratively disappeared from our national consciousness. In this book, Civil War historian John Reeves illuminates the incredible turnaround in attitudes towards the defeated general by examining the evolving case against him from 1865 to 1870 and beyond.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 18, 2018
      In this well-crafted narrative, Reeves demystifies the Confederate general Robert E. Lee and the reasons he was given amnesty after the Civil War. After the end of the Civil War, Tennessee-born President Andrew Johnson and members of Congress vehemently argued in favor of indicting and executing Confederate leaders, while Ulysses S. Grant, who enjoyed rising popularity as a magnanimous war hero, publicly argued for amnesty for his former rival. Though Lee was reluctant at first to take the oath of loyalty to the United States that Johnson required for amnesty, he finally did upon becoming president of Washington College so as to “set an example of submission to authority.” By 1900, he was a popular, even heroic, figure in both the South and the North. A substantial look into Lee’s own letters and public opinions on slaves and freedmen offers the strongest refutation of this supposed benevolence; Lee favored extreme racial inequality, though he did argue against the “theory” of slavery. Reeves offers a timely portrait of how the cults of Lee and the states’ rights lost cause became firmly entrenched in American culture within only 25 years of the Civil War—and still haunt 21st-century debates over Confederate monuments and battle flags.

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  • English

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