Aftermath of The War
- Abraham Lincoln's Assassination
- African-American Civil Rights Movement (1896–1954)
- Alabama Claims
- Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands
- Bushwhacker
- Carpetbagger
- Confederados
- Freedman's Savings Bank
- Grand Army of the Republic
- James-Younger Gang
- Jim Crow laws
- Juneteenth
- Ku Klux Klan
- Last surviving United States war veterans
- Lost Cause of the Confederacy
- Memorial Day
- Mobile magazine explosion
- Neo-Confederate
- Old soldiers' home
- Plessy v. Ferguson
- Reconstruction era of the United States
- Redeemers
- Southern Claims Commission
- SS Sultana
- Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
- Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
- Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
- Slavery and States' Rights
- United Confederate Veterans
- Unknown Confederate Soldier Monument in Horse Cave
Read more about this topic: Outline Of The American Civil War
Famous quotes containing the words aftermath of, aftermath and/or war:
“The aftermath of joy is not usually more joy.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)
“The aftermath of joy is not usually more joy.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)
“Against war one might say that it makes the victor stupid and the vanquished malicious. In its favor, that in producing these two effects it barbarizes, and so makes the combatants more natural. For culture it is a sleep or a wintertime, and man emerges from it stronger for good and for evil.”
—Friedrich Nietzsche (18441900)