In this innovative book, Kyle Sinisi explores a little-known chapter in the history of American politicsthe struggle between states and the federal government over the costs of fighting the Civil War. At stake was the disposition of some 8 million.
Focusing on Kansas, Kentucky, and Missouri, Sinisi explores the process by which states were reimbursed by Washington in the most expensive intergovernmental contact of the 19th century. Recasting our understanding of governance, he shows that traditional sources of influencecourts and political partieswere less important in settling claims than adjutants general and private agents who fought for cash bonanzas. These power brokers helped shape the federal bureaucracyand the process of state building.
Sinisi's book on this interesting era of intergovernmental activies is both informative and engaging.Sinisi's tightly focused yet comparative study is impeccably reserached and engagingly written. . .