Acknowledgments
Introduction: Reevaluating Robert E. Lee
Chapter One: “I am aware of having done nothing wrong & cannot
flee.”
Chapter Two: “They shall suffer for this, they shall suffer for
this.”
Chapter Three: “Hands dripping with the blood of slaughtered
innocents.”
Chapter Four: “When can these men be tried?”
Chapter Five: “The world forgetting, by the world forgot.”
Chapter Six: “…rather as a demon than a man.”
Chapter Seven: “There is General Lee, as hungry for the gallows as
Davis.”
Chapter Eight: “Gen. Lee a Woman Whipper.”
Chapter Nine: “It used to fashionable to try a man before they
hanged him.”
Chapter Ten: “…this noble man died ‘prisoner of war on
parole.’”
Chapter Eleven: “…you gentleman that use the pen should see that
justice is done us.”
Appendices I-II
Selected Bibliography
About the Author
For over twenty-five years, John Reeves has been working to make complex subjects more interesting and accessible for students and general readers. For 15 years he taught European and American history at colleges in Chicago, the Bronx, and London. More recently, as an editor and writer at The Motley Fool, he produced investing-related content for millions of readers. He resides in Washington, D.C.
In this well-crafted narrative, Reeves demystifies the Confederate
general Robert E. Lee and the reasons he was given amnesty after
the Civil War.... 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.
*Publishers Weekly*
A provocative work of history and cultural analysis.... Mr. Reeves,
a journalist and former history teacher, does an able job of
untangling the shifting public sentiment, tactical misjudgments and
legal ordeals that shaped the indictment and ultimately crippled
it.
*The Wall Street Journal*
Perhaps nothing demonstrated the unwillingness of Americans to come
to terms with the bloody history of 1861–1865 so well as their
veneration of Robert E. Lee. For decades (and without a sense of
irony), northerners and southerners acclaimed the commander of the
Army of Northern Virginia as an authentic national hero. . . . John
Reeves’ new book, however, “tells the story of the forgotten legal
and moral case that was made against the Confederate general in the
days after the Civil War.” In his lively and accessible narrative,
Reeves relates “the history Americans tried to forget.”
*New York Journal of Books*
More so than any previous writer, Reeves makes clear that following
the Civil War northerners held Lee accountable for all manner of
sins—not only treason and disunion—but also for the abuse of white
and black Union troops held in Confederate prisoner of war camps.
Lee’s ascension into the pantheon of Civil War icons, at least in
the North, thus was a slow process. This is an important
assessment.
*John David Smith, author of An Old Creed for the New South:
Proslavery Ideology and Historiography, 1865-1918*
This fine book delivers a great deal more than promised by the
title. It not only clears up misconceptions about the aborted
indictment of Lee and other Confederates for treason; it also
offers incisive treatments of Lee's connections to slavery,
secession, postwar Reconstruction, and the Southern cult of the
Lost Cause.
*James M. McPherson, Princeton University*
In John Reeves’ remarkable book, we see a telling and striking
portrait of Robert E. Lee after the Civil War. Unheard of to many,
this accurate portrayal of a murky character and time in our
nation’s history should be read and consumed by all.
*The Reverend Robert W. Lee, IV, Professor and Pastor, Collateral
Descendent of Confederate General Robert E. Lee*
At a time when memorials to Lee arouse controversy, John Reeves
reminds us that Lee aroused bitter disagreement during his own
lifetime. Delving into the circumstances surrounding Lee’s little
remembered indictment for treason after the Civil War, Reeves
weaves a timely and fascinating story of Lee’s actions and
reputation, the definition of treason, and the eventual elevation
of the former Confederate to the pantheon of American heroes.
Anyone interested in the roots of our contemporary debates would do
well to reflect upon the history so ably recounted in the Lost
Indictment of Robert E. Lee.
*W. Fitzhugh Brundage, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill*
“Reeve’s study of the abortive Lee treason prosecution offers fresh
insight into the tortured ending of the Civil War, the movement
toward white sectional reconciliation at the expense of African
American rights, and the construction of the Lost Cause, of which
Lee is both an essential figure and initial architect.”
*CHOICE*
John Reeves titled his introduction to this work “Reevaluating
Robert E. Lee” but The Lost Indictment of Robert E. Lee is a
reevaluation of many things. Reeves reevaluates Robert E. Lee after
1865, the attempted legal case against him and other former
Confederates, and Lee’s views on slavery, the war, and
Reconstruction. He also reevaluates Andrew Johnson’s role in
punishing former Confederates, the attempt and failure to secure
punishment against Confederate leaders, and the creation of the
Lost Cause in the aftermath of the war. Overall, The Lost
Indictment is a fascinating and enjoyable read that untangles many
questions about the transition from war to peace after the
destructive Civil War.
*Civil Discourse*
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