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Lou Williams
Lou Williams

Professor Williams, interests as a historian are directly related to growing up in the deep South during the turbulent years of the Civil Rights Movement. Watching with horror as my hometown-Birmingham-seethed then exploded with racial tension, she experienced a deep need to understand. Hence my research and the classes I teach explore the Constitutional and racial issues of American history. Her first book, The Great South Carolina Ku Klux Klan Trials, 1871-1872, grapples with the problems of Reconstruction in South Carolina and the failure of the U.S. Government under the 14th and 15th Amendments to sustain a rule of law strong enough to protect the former slaves as citizens. She is currently completing a book that examines the federal government's ongoing efforts to protect African American voting rights after the formal end of Reconstruction in 1877. Select Publications: Introduction to Bitter Freedom: William Stone's Record of Service in the Freedmen's Bureau. University of South Carolina Press, 2008. The Great South Carolina Ku Klux Klan Trials, 1871-1872. University of Georgia Press, 1996. "The Ellenton Riot Case and Federal Enforcement of Black Rights in post-Redemption South Carolina," in Donald G. Nieman and Christopher Waldrep, Race and Criminal Justice in the American South, 1800-1900. University of Georgia Press, 2000. "The South Carolina Ku Klux Klan Trials and Enforcement of Federal Rights, 1871-1872." Civil War History 39 (March 1993).

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