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Featured researches published by Peter Wallenstein.


Journal of Southern History | 2006

Virginia's Civil War

Peter Wallenstein; Bertram Wyatt-Brown

A., Jim, Letters, 1864. 2 items. Photocopies. Mss2A1b. This collection contains photocopies of two letters home from a member of the 30th Virginia Infantry Regiment. The first letter, 11 April 1864, concerns camp life near Kinston, N.C., and an impending advance of a Confederate ironclad on the Neuse River against New Bern, N.C. The second letter, 11 June 1864, includes family news, a description of life in the trenches on Turkey Hill in Henrico County during the battle of Cold Harbor, and speculation on Ulysses S. Grants strategy. The collection includes typescript copies of both letters.


American Nineteenth Century History | 2005

Reconstruction, Segregation, and Miscegenation: Interracial Marriage and the Law in the Lower South, 1865–1900

Peter Wallenstein

On the eve of Congressional Reconstruction, all seven states of the Lower South had laws against interracial marriage. During the Republican interlude that began in 1867–68, six of the seven states (all but Georgia) suspended those laws, whether through judicial invalidation or legislative repeal. Yet by 1894 all six had restored such bans. The trajectory of miscegenation laws in the Lower South between 1865 and 1900 permits a reconsideration of the range of possibilities the Reconstruction era brought to public policy. More than that, it forces a reconsideration of the origins of the Jim Crow South. Legally mandated segregation in public transit, as C. Vann Woodward observed in 1955, took hold late in the century. But such segregation in public education, as Howard R. Rabinowitz pointed out with his formula ‘from exclusion to segregation,’ originated during the first postwar years. Segregation on the marital front – universal at the start of the period and again at the end, but relaxed in most Lower South states for a time in between – combined the two patterns into yet a third. Adding another layer of complexity was the issue of where the color line was located, and thus which individuals were classified on each side of it.


Archive | 2002

Tell the Court I Love My Wife: Race, Marriage, and Law--An American History

Peter Wallenstein


Journal of Southern History | 2000

Race, labor, and punishment in the New South

Peter Wallenstein; Martha A. Myers


Archive | 2008

Higher education and the civil rights movement : white supremacy, black Southerners, and college campuses

Peter Wallenstein; Stanley Harrold; Randall M. Miller


Journal of Southern History | 1999

Virginia Tech, Land-Grant University, 1872-1997: History of a School, a State, a Nation.

Lee S. Duemer; Peter Wallenstein


Journal of Southern History | 1984

Rich Man's War, Rich Man's Fight: Civil War and the Transformation of Public Finance in Georgia

Peter Wallenstein


Louisiana Law Review | 2016

Slavery Under the Thirteenth Amendment: Race and the Law of Crime and Punishment in the Post-Civil War South

Peter Wallenstein


Archive | 2014

Race, Sex, and the Freedom to Marry: Loving v. Virginia

Peter Wallenstein


Archive | 2014

Race, Sex, and the Freedom to Marry

Peter Wallenstein

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