Gerald Henig

A rambling account, California State history professor Henig and Chabor College
instructor Niderost seek to prove the obvious: that the watershed event of
the Civil War marshaled enormous social, political, geographical, mechanical
and medical changes, leaving nearly every aspect of the United States utterly
revised. As Harvard professor George Ticknor wrote in 1869, because of the
war, "It does not seem to me as if I were living in the country in which
I was born." After the war, blacks were free, emergency medical technology
(not to mention funeral technology) was much improved, and the nation's naval
options had been enhanced to include usable submarines and minesweepers. The
war also left behind a new cynicism vis-à-vis the Constitution and
its civil rights protectionsthis after Lincoln's suspension of the writ
of habeas corpus. Other legacies included a finely tuned (if unjust and corrupt)
conscription system, the start of what would become a tradition of presidential
assassination and the launch of the transcontinental railroad. While few can
argue with Henig's and Niderost's catalogue of war-born innovations, their
project remains just thata laundry list, with little synthesis.*