Acknowledgments
Introduction, by Jim Downs, Erica Armstrong Dunbar, T.K. Hunter,
and Timothy Patrick McCarthy
Part I: Archives
1. Looking for Ona Judge: An Unfinished Story of Freedom, by Erica
Armstrong Dunbar
2. “Like People in History”: Why Social History Matters to the LGBT
Community, by Jim Downs
Part II: Revisions
3. American Founders Reconsidered: The Case of Thomas Jefferson and
Henry Christophe, by Ashli White
4. The Civil War, Slavery, and the Problem of Neutrality, by April
E. Holm
5. Historians, Lincoln, and “the Ruining of America," by Matthew
Taylor Raffety
6. In Search of the Costs of Segregation, by Elizabeth A.
Herbin-Triant
Part III: History Matters
7. Why Historical Film Matters, by Kellie Carter Jackson
8. A Mob Museum Matters, by Michael Green
9. On Living History and Stories Unfinished, by Timothy Patrick
McCarthy
10. In the Matter of Worth: The Value of Black Lives and the Law,
by T.K. Hunter
Epilogue: Eric Foner: Historian of American Freedom, by Katrina
vanden Heuvel
Contributors
Index
Jim Downs is the Gilder Lehrman–National Endowment for the
Humanities Professor of Civil War Era Studies and History at
Gettysburg College. He is also the editor of the journal Civil War
History.
Erica Armstrong Dunbar is the Charles and Mary Beard Distinguished
Professor of History at Rutgers University. She serves as the
national director of the Association of Black Women Historians.
T.K. Hunter (1956–2018) was a historian of slavery and freedom in
the Atlantic world who taught a wide variety of courses at Western
Connecticut State University, Princeton University, Columbia
University, Montclair State University, Horace Mann School,
Manhattan College, Brooklyn College, the New School, and City
College of New York.
Timothy Patrick McCarthy holds a joint faculty appointment at the
Harvard Graduate School of Education and the John F. Kennedy School
of Government. He is also the Stanley Paterson Professor of
American History in the Boston Clemente Course in the Humanities.
To recover a long-buried past in the archives is to experience the
most extraordinary joy. But, as Reckoning with History shows so
beautifully, doing true justice to the past is at the real heart of
what it means to be a historian. This moving volume reminds us all
why the writing of history matters so very much to the world we
live in and to the one we hope yet to make.
*Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Blood in
the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its
Legacy*
I love these essays. They are among the best ever written about the
craft of history writing, the indispensability of creating and
using archives, as well as the power of hindsight and new
perspective to reconsider the meaning of the past. This brilliant
anthology is perfect for this moment, just when we need to
understand more than ever how American history becomes part of the
public narrative of who we are.
*Khalil Gibran Muhammad, author of The Condemnation of
Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban
America*
Reckoning with History is a celebration and testament to how one’s
changing social and political commitments can—and indeed
must—inform one’s historical work, as modeled by Eric Foner. The
editors have put together a timely and insightful group of essays
about why history matters and why engaging with the public should
matter to historians.
*Adrienne Petty, author of Standing Their Ground: Small Farmers
in North Carolina Since the Civil War*
Reckoning with History: Unfinished Stories of American Freedom
transports the reader from the mundane names, dates, and events
often associated with history class and into the world of the
professional historian, opening students’ eyes to a world of
research, interpretation, discussion, argumentation, and revision.
By doing so, the authors of its well-written essays connect their
thought-provoking work to contemporary social, cultural, and
political events.
*The History Teacher*
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