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Description
New Orleans is the largest American city ever occupied by enemy forces for an extended period of time. Falling to an amphibious Federal force in the spring of 1862, the city was threatened with the possibility of Confederate recapture even as late as 1864. How this tension affected the lives of both civilians and soldiers during the occupation is here examined.
Gerald M. Capers finds that the occupation policies of General Benjamin F. Butler and General Nathaniel P. Banks were successful and that Butler’s harsh policies were by no means as vicious as legend would have it. Banks at first reversed Butler’s harsh policies, but was gradually compelled to become less lenient. Banks did succeed in establishing a civil government under Lincoln’s orders, but Congress refused to recognize the civil government and imposed a reconstruction government at war’s end.
Life for the average resident of New Orleans, Capers states, was much better during the occupation than it was for Southerners in areas still in Confederate control. Relative economic decline had begun in the 1850’s but New Orleans even enjoyed a war boom during the last two years. And although America’s only brief experience as an occupation force at the time had been in Vera Cruz during 1846, Butler and Banks performed their duties well.
Gerald M. Capers, head of the Department of History at Newcomb College, Tulane University, is the author of several books, among them Stephen A. Douglas: Defender of the Union.
Publication Date
1965
Publisher
The University Press of Kentucky
Place of Publication
Lexington, KY
ISBN
9780813151625
eISBN
9780813162379
Keywords
New Orleans, Civil War, New Orleans history
Disciplines
United States History
Recommended Citation
Capers, Gerald M., "Occupied City: New Orleans Under the Federals 1862–1865" (1965). United States History. 53.
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_united_states_history/53
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