The American Civil War is the defining period in a rich history that belongs to all Americans. No city personifies the Civil War like the capital of the Confederacy. Richmond is both the image of dignity and manhood for the Confederacy and the very seat of rebellion and insurrection for the United States. Richmond would survive the war relatively unscathed only to become the epicenter for what Reconstruction would look like. Author Nelson Lankford, former editor of the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, has written an excellent history of post-war Richmond titled After the Fire: Richmond in Defeat (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2025, 356 pgs., $32.95). After the Fire is a volume in the A Nation Divided: Studies in the Civil War Era series from the University of Virginia Press,
Richmond is the quintessential southern city. Its’ history goes back to Virginia’s colonial era. Presidents visited Richmond. Famous Virginians such as Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and Robert E. Lee all knew Richmond as a place where they could feel that their work was important. However, Richmond also exhibited dehumanizing slave auctions, extreme racial segregation, and a desire to celebrate figures such as Lee, who many believed had committed treason. Richmond was cast aflame on April 3, 1865 in what many thought was a signal for the proverbial phoenix to rise from the ashes.
Lankford uses a wide variety of primary sources to describe life in Richmond immediately following the end of the war through the first years of Reconstruction. His prose is an excellent narrative that flows smoothly from that fateful day in April of 1865 through the end of the 1860s and the emergence of the white supremacy inspired government of the many ex-Confederates pardoned by President Andrew Johnson. After the Fire is an excellent social history. It serves a welcome need for a volume that explores the impacts of the Civil War on everyday citizens, former Confederates, and government officials striving to reshape modern America. After the Fire deserves a prominent place on the bookshelf of any reader interested in the Civil War and American history.
Matt
After the Fire: Richmond in Defeat
Nelson D. Lankford
upress.virginia.edu
ISBN 9780813953366 356 pgs.,, $32.95 $26.69 Kindle