Nothing More than Freedom explores the long and complex legal history of
Black freedom in the United States. From the ratification of the
Thirteenth Amendment in 1865 until the end of Reconstruction in 1877,
supreme courts in former slave states decided approximately 700 lawsuits
associated with the struggle for Black freedom and equal citizenship.
This litigation - the majority through private law - triggered questions
about American liberty and reassessed the nation's legal and political
order following the Civil War. Judicial decisions set the terms of
debates about racial identity, civil rights, and national belonging, and
established that slavery, as a legal institution and social practice,
remained actionable in American law well after its ostensible demise.
The verdicts determined how unresolved facets of slavery would undercut
ongoing efforts for abolition and the realization of equality.
Insightful and compelling, this work makes an important intervention in
the history of post-Civil War law.