Features
... and also among some historians who contend, as does constitutional historian Paul Moreno, that the Reconstruction Congress “believed there should be one class of American citizenship, without racial classification, whether malignant or benign” (Moreno, 1995, pp. 295–298). Moreno maintains that the 1 ...
... and also among some historians who contend, as does constitutional historian Paul Moreno, that the Reconstruction Congress “believed there should be one class of American citizenship, without racial classification, whether malignant or benign” (Moreno, 1995, pp. 295–298). Moreno maintains that the 1 ...
I. Introduction - The University of Akron
... Amendment, however, the status of Americans “with respect to the states depended upon this national statute and upon their own choice or residence, and it could not be impeached or violated by state action.”9 In short, the Civil War itself and the ensuing Fourteenth Amendment resolved the previously ...
... Amendment, however, the status of Americans “with respect to the states depended upon this national statute and upon their own choice or residence, and it could not be impeached or violated by state action.”9 In short, the Civil War itself and the ensuing Fourteenth Amendment resolved the previously ...