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Reconstructors

Land, Work, and Engineering After the Civil War

Explores the institutional and environmental transformations that occurred during the Reconstruction Era. 

While the Reconstruction Era in America saw a paradigmatic realignment of the country’s core institutions and values, there was a physical quality to Reconstruction as well: the country was not only rebuilding the South after the Civil War, but flat-out building as it expanded westward. 

In Reconstructors, John Dean Davis details how the Army Corps of Engineers and its subcontractors designed and redesigned the infrastructural landscape to support the republic’s rebirth. The Corps’ projects not only transformed the landscape; they created markets, fostered a distinctive expansionist culture, and—for a time—enacted a less discriminatory economic and social agenda across the South and West. Davis aims to bring federal power, environmentalism, and capitalism into a frame that reveals the landscape’s power to further ideology. 


304 pages | 49 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2026

History: American History, History of Technology, Military History

Reviews

Reconstructors offers a unique contribution through its expertise on governmental archival sources, Reconstruction-era politics, and the history of engineering and landscape. In doing so, Davis’s work points the way to a more expansive framing of the range of possible postbellum relationships between the federal government and southern African Americans.”

David M. Prior, University of New Mexico

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations

Introduction

Part I
1. The View from the Steamer Flora
2. Mud and Republicans
3. Soldiers, Land, and Lines
4. Engineering a Running

Part II
5. New Routes Across the South
6. Muscle Shoals
7. “To Make the Sea Do the Work”
8. A Breathing Shore

Epilogue: Assembling a New South

Acknowledgments
Notes
Sources and Bibliography
Index

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