• Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Skip to content
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
HistoryNet

HistoryNet

The most comprehensive and authoritative history site on the Internet.

  • Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
Posted inReview

ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire

by Susannah J. Ural2/15/2018
Share This Article

Becoming American Under Fire: Irish Americans, African Americans, and the Politics of Citizenship During the Civil War Era,

by Christian G. Samito, Cornell University Press, 2010, $39.95

Christian Samito’s Becoming American Under Fire is a superb study of the expansion of citizenship during the Civil War era. He proves that through active defense of the Union, the Irish and African Americans in the North gained the skills and confidence to demand their place in the American social and political arenas. While the expansion of citizenship affected all Americans, few groups made such a dramatic transition from antebellum nativism and slavery to the legal changes that followed the war as did Irish Catholics and blacks. Because of this, they serve as an excellent lens through which to study this process.

Samito, a practicing attorney in Boston with a Ph.D. in history from Boston College, analyzes how the experiences of these two groups, in separate but complementary ways, “helped to redefine the legal concept and practical meaning of American citizenship.” His arguments are grounded in thorough research and a sophisticated understanding of the existing scholarship. In chapters that shift between the two groups, Samito gracefully proves his case.

He stops short of the classic argument put forth by Ella Lonn and other historians that, through demonstrations of loyal military service, Irish and African Americans convinced native-born whites to embrace them as fellow citizens. There are times, however, where Samito comes close to making that claim only to later contradict himself, as when he asserts that “Irish American military service accelerated the withering, though not the death, of nativist feelings and action against them.” While there were some examples of “withering” nativism in the years immediately following the war, significant racial and ethnic prejudice returned during the 1870s and beyond, which he makes clear in his final chapter.

Samito is on stronger ground when he sticks to his central point, which is that native-born whites did not necessarily reverse their previous racial and ethnic bigotry, or if they did, there is no way to prove it was the result of minority military service. What scholars can show, and what Samito demonstrates admirably, is that the service of Irish Americans and African Americans made them more aware of their allegiance to the United States. It led them to conclude that they had earned the rights of full American citizenship, and exposed them to the tools with which they could seize these rights, with or without the help of their fellow citizens.

 

Originally published in the September 2010 issue of America’s Civil War. To subscribe, click here. 

Share This Article
by Susannah J. Ural

Susannah Ural is the Blount Professor in Military History at the University of Southern Mississippi. Her latest book, Don’t Hurry Me Down to Hades: The Civil War in the Words of Those Who Lived It, highlights the experiences of families like the Nugents.

more by Susannah J. Ural

    Dive deeper

    • Immigration

    Citation information

    Susannah J. Ural (2/25/2026) ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire. HistoryNet Retrieved from https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/.
    "ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire."Susannah J. Ural - 2/25/2026, https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/
    Susannah J. Ural 2/15/2018 ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire., viewed 2/25/2026,<https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/>
    Susannah J. Ural - ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire. [Internet]. [Accessed 2/25/2026]. Available from: https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/
    Susannah J. Ural. "ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire." Susannah J. Ural - Accessed 2/25/2026. https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/
    "ACW Book Review: Becoming American Under Fire." Susannah J. Ural [Online]. Available: https://historynet.com/acw-book-review-becoming-american-fire/. [Accessed: 2/25/2026]

    Related stories

    Buffalo Bill Cody
    Stories

    10 Pivotal Events in the Life of Buffalo Bill

    William Frederick Cody (1846-1917) led a signal life, from his youthful exploits with the Pony Express and in service as a U.S. Army scout to his globetrotting days as a showman and international icon Buffalo Bill.

    ww2-homefront-poster-war-bond
    Portfolio

    During the War Years, Posters From the American Homefront Told You What to Do — And What Not to Do

    If you needed some motivation during the war years, there was probably a poster for that.

    Booger Red Privett on horseback
    Feature

    The One and Only ‘Booger’ Was Among History’s Best Rodeo Performers

    Texan Sam Privett, the colorfully nicknamed proprietor of Booger Red’s Wild West, backed up his boast he could ride anything on four legs.

    Stories

    The Top Books and Films About Buffalo Bill Cody

    Steve Friesen, the former director of the Buffalo Bill Museum & Grave in Colorado, assesses what has been written and filmed.

    HistoryNet
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    “History is a guide to navigation in perilous times. History is who we are and why we are the way we are.”

    David McCullough, author of “1776”

    HistoryNet.com is brought to you by HistoryNet LLC, the world’s largest publisher of history magazines. HistoryNet.com contains daily features, photo galleries and over 25,000 articles originally published in our nine magazines.

    Our Magazines

    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II

    About Us

    • What Is HistoryNet.com?
    • Advertise With Us
    • Careers
    • Meet Our Staff!

    Stay Curious

    Subscribe to receive our weekly newsletter with top stories from master historians.

    sign me up!

    © 2026 HistoryNet.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service