The Union victory in the Civil War in 1865 may have given some 4 million slaves their freedom, but the process of rebuilding the South during the Reconstruction period (1865-1877) introduced a new set of significant challenges. Under the administration of President Andrew Johnson in 1865 and 1866, new southern state legislatures passed restrictive “black codes” to control the labor and behavior of former slaves and other African Americans. Outrage in the North over these codes eroded support for the approach known as Presidential Reconstruction and led to the triumph of the more radical wing of the Republican Party. During Radical Reconstruction, which began in 1867, newly enfranchised blacks gained a voice in government for the first time in American history, winning election to southern state legislatures and even to the U.S. Congress. In less than a decade, however, reactionary forces–including the Ku Klux Klan–would reverse the changes wrought by Radical Reconstruction in a violent backlash that restored white supremacy in the South.
EMANCIPATION AND RECONSTRUCTION
At the outset of the Civil War, to the dismay of the more radical abolitionists in the North, President Abraham Lincoln did not make abolition of slavery a goal of the Union war effort. To do so, he feared, would drive the border slave states still loyal to the Union into the Confederacy and anger more conservative northerners. By the summer of 1862, however, the slaves themselves had pushed the issue, heading by the thousands to the Union lines as Lincoln’s troops marched through the South. Their actions debunked one of the strongest myths underlying Southern devotion to the “peculiar institution”–that many slaves were truly content in bondage–and convinced Lincoln that emancipation had become a political and military necessity. In response to Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, which freed more than 3 million slaves in the Confederate states by January 1, 1863, blacks enlisted in the Union Army in large numbers, reaching some 180,000 by war’s end.
Emancipation changed the stakes of the Civil War, ensuring that a Union victory would mean large-scale social revolution in the South. It was still very unclear, however, what form this revolution would take. Over the next several years, Lincoln considered ideas about how to welcome the devastated South back into the Union, but as the war drew to a close in early 1865 he still had no clear plan. In a speech delivered on April 11, while referring to plans for Reconstruction inLouisiana, Lincoln proposed that some blacks–including free blacks and those who had enlisted in the military–deserved the right to vote. He was assassinated three days later, however, and it would fall to his successor to put plans for Reconstruction in place.
PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION
At the end of May 1865, President Andrew Johnson announced his plans for Reconstruction, which reflected both his staunch Unionism and his firm belief in states’ rights. In Johnson’s view, the southern states had never given up their right to govern themselves, and the federal government had no right to determine voting requirements or other questions at the state level. Under Johnson’s Presidential Reconstruction, all land that had been confiscated by the Union Army and distributed to the freed slaves by the army or the Freedmen’s Bureau (established by Congress in 1865) reverted to its prewar owners. Apart from being required to uphold the abolition of slavery (in compliance with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution), swear loyalty to the Union and pay off war debt, southern state governments were given free reign to rebuild themselves.
As a result of Johnson’s leniency, many southern states in 1865 and 1866 successfully enacted a series of laws known as the “black codes,” which were designed to restrict freed blacks’ activity and ensure their availability as a labor force. These repressive codes enraged many in the North, including numerous members of Congress, which refused to seat congressmen and senators elected from the southern states. In early 1866, Congress passed the Freedmen’s Bureau and Civil Rights Bills and sent them to Johnson for his signature. The first bill extended the life of the bureau, originally established as a temporary organization charged with assisting refugees and freed slaves, while the second defined all persons born in the United States as national citizens who were to enjoy equality before the law. After Johnson vetoed the bills–causing a permanent rupture in his relationship with Congress that would culminate in his impeachment in 1868–the Civil Rights Act became the first major bill to become law over presidential veto.
RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION
After northern voters rejected Johnson’s policies in the congressional elections in late 1866, Republicans in Congress took firm hold of Reconstruction in the South. The following March, again over Johnson’s veto, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act of 1867, which temporarily divided the South into five military districts and outlined how governments based on universal (male) suffrage were to be organized. The law also required southern states to ratify the 14th Amendment, which broadened the definition of citizenship, granting “equal protection” of the Constitution to former slaves, before they could rejoin the Union. In February 1869, Congress approved the 15th Amendment (adopted in 1870), which guaranteed that a citizen’s right to vote would not be denied “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”
By 1870, all of the former Confederate states had been admitted to the Union, and the state constitutions during the years of Radical Reconstruction were the most progressive in the region’s history. African-American participation in southern public life after 1867 would be by far the most radical development of Reconstruction, which was essentially a large-scale experiment in interracial democracy unlike that of any other society following the abolition of slavery. Blacks won election to southern state governments and even to the U.S. Congress during this period. Among the other achievements of Reconstruction were the South’s first state-funded public school systems, more equitable taxation legislation, laws against racial discrimination in public transport and accommodations and ambitious economic development programs (including aid to railroads and other enterprises).
RECONSTRUCTION COMES TO AN END
After 1867, an increasing number of southern whites turned to violence in response to the revolutionary changes of Radical Reconstruction. The Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist organizations targeted local Republican leaders, white and black, and other African Americans who challenged white authority. Though federal legislation passed during the administration of President Ulysses S. Grant in 1871 took aim at the Klan and others who attempted to interfere with black suffrage and other political rights, white supremacy gradually reasserted its hold on the South after the early 1870s as support for Reconstruction waned. Racism was still a potent force in both South and North, and Republicans became more conservative and less egalitarian as the decade continued. In 1874–after an economic depression plunged much of the South into poverty–the Democratic Party won control of the House of Representatives for the first time since the Civil War.
When Democrats waged a campaign of violence to take control of Mississippi in 1875, Grant refused to send federal troops, marking the end of federal support for Reconstruction-era state governments in the South. By 1876, only Florida, Louisiana and South Carolina were still in Republican hands. In the contested presidential election that year, Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayesreached a compromise with Democrats in Congress: In exchange for certification of his election, he acknowledged Democratic control of the entire South. The Compromise of 1876 marked the end of Reconstruction as a distinct period, but the struggle to deal with the revolution ushered in by slavery’s eradication would continue in the South and elsewhere long after that date. A century later, the legacy of Reconstruction would be revived during the civil rights movement of the 1960s, as African Americans fought for the political, economic and social equality that had long been denied them.
1) what is the 10% plan?
ReplyDelete2) what are carpet baggers?
3) who was john wilkes booth?
4)why was it hard to set up a government in the south?
5)why were their special electoral test?
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ReplyDelete1) What were the different perceptions southerners had about freedom?
ReplyDelete2) What were the three conflicting groups in the republican party?
3) Why was Rutherford B. Hayes opposed and criticized so much?
4) What was the Crop-Linen system?
5) What was the long term impact of the Jim Crow laws? What act of violence was being implemented during that time period?
1) People in the south have different thoughts about slavery and letting them be free because most them felt like they were superior then them and didn't want to lose there work force others who went against slavery probably had to do with them not being able to get jobs due to slavery.
Delete2) Three conflicting groups in the Republican party are radical, modern and in-conservative.
3) Hayes was criticized so much because he didn't win the popular vote but still became president many thought it was corrupted.
4) The crop-lien system was a credit system used by former slaves, they never saw and money and barely got to keep their share of crops because they was always in debt to their landlord.
5)One long time term effect of the Jim crow law was that it always kept race an issue and whites also got the better places and things. Act of violence around this time was the KKK.
1. What was the purpose of the KKK?
ReplyDelete2. What was the Compromise of 1877?
3. Why are the Jim Crow Laws significant?
4. What do the voting restrictions tell us about the freedom given to the slaves during the Reconstruction Era?
5. How did the Reconstruction come to an end?
1. The purpose of the KKK was to show the white supremacy by terrorism. They used to hurt blacks to show it.
Delete2. The Compromise of 1877 was when Hayes won the Election of 1876 and he promised to remove federal troops from the South.
3. The Jim Crow Laws were significant becuase it enforced segregation in the South.
4. The restrictions that the government gave to the freedmen such as the literacy test and the poll taxes show that it was hard for them to actually vote. It was almost like no having the right to vote.
5. The Reconstruction come to an end after the Election of 1875.
1.The purpose of the KKK was a group of white people who oppressed blacks by using force to show there superiority.
Delete2.The compromise of 1877 ended the reconstruction era and puled out troops out of state politics in the south.
3.Jim crow laws are significant because it showed how there was still lack of equality and rights for African Americans, and Jim crow laws caused a vast amount of segregation throughout the South.
4.Voting restrictions show us that freed slaves still don't have any rights to rights t vote because whites made it so difficult for them to actually vote.
5.After the election of 1875.
1.How did Lincoln died?
ReplyDelete2.Who were the Scalawags?
3.Why did white landowner decreased?
4.What did Andrew Johnson do after Lincoln's death? Explain.
5.Why did African American left plantations?
1.Lincoln was assassinated by John Booth due to a bullet wound
Delete2. They were local whites in the Southern Republicans who had resettled and supported the reconstruction government.
3.Due to being poor and sharecropping
4.First American president to be impeached.As president, Johnson took a moderate approach to restoring the South to the Union, and clashed with Radical Republicans. In 1868, he was impeached by Congress, but he was not removed from office.
5.Sharecropping was not beneficial. Caused chaos and huge debt. Others reunited with family.
1. Who assassinated Abraham Lincoln?
ReplyDelete2. What was the Compromise of 1877?
3. How did some African Americans enter the middle class?
4. Although it increased for both blacks and whites, what was still one problem with education?
5. Why might the Reconstruction plan be considered a failure?
1. John Wilkes Booth killed Lincoln.
Delete2. The Compromise of 1877 was a purported a deal that settled the intensely disputed 1876 U.S. presidential election, pulled federal troops out of state politics in the South, and ended the Reconstruction Era.
3. When the ongoing African-American Civil Rights Movement led to the outlawing of racial segregation.
4.Education was segregated and white kids had better opportunity.
5. There was also the problem of freeing the slaves.
1) How did the lives of African Americans improve during the reconstruction period?
ReplyDelete2) What were the Jim Crow and how were African Americans affected by it?
3)What was the crop-lien system?
4) How did the assassination of Abraham Lincoln effect the north.
5) Who were the radical republican and what did they want when it came to African Americans.
1) The lives of many African Americans improved as education was opened at a grand scale for former slaves. Also a new class arose within blacks known as the middle class. They also gained the ability to vote which lead to the House of Representatives having 20 blacks who served for the next 32 years.
Delete2) The Jim Crow laws were a series of laws that lead to the racial segregation of blacks and whites. Also it lead to the implementation of the "separate but equal" status. African Americans were then forced to be separate from whites in nearly every aspect of their lives.
3) The crop-lien system was a credit system in the south. Sharecroppers and tenant farmers had to obtain supplies and food on credit from local merchants. But this lead to debt so they had to pay higher interest rates which became a never ending cycle of debt and credit.
4) The assassination of Abraham Lincoln leads to the northerners anger as they suspected a great conspiracy organized by the unrepentant leaders of the defeated south.
5) They were a division within the republicans that believed in the punishment of the civil and military leaders of the Confederacy. They wanted to grant suffrage for former slaves.
1) What party was Rutherford B. Hayes part of?
ReplyDelete2) Who assassinated Abraham Lincoln?
3) What did the Black Codes enforce towards the African Americans?
4) How were freedmen's rights restrained? (3 examples)
5) Why was Andrew Johnson impeached?
1. Republican Party
Delete2. John Wilkes Booth
3. Segregation
4. The grandfather clause, literacy tests, poll taxes
5. Andrew Johnson was impeached because he removed his secretary of war which violated the tenure of office act.
1.) How did Abraham Lincoln die?
ReplyDelete2.) What was the Compromise of 1876?
3.) What was the difference between Radical Republicans and Conservative Republicans?
4.) Explain Andrew Johnson's "Restoration" plan.
5.) Why was it hard to set up government in the South and what did Southerners have to do for amnesty?
1) Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.
Delete2)the compromise of 1876 was an unwritten deal that settled the disputes of the us presidential election.
3)a radical republican wanted everyone to get punished that participated in the war and wanted suffrage for African Americans. A Conservative Republican didn't want anything to do with slaves in the south they wanted them to do it on their own but did make the north take a vow on slavery.
4) Andrew Johnson's Restoration plan was to leave it up the states for laws with African Americans and also wanted big plantation owners to come to him for special petitions.
5)because the south didn't agree with the north, they had to vow they wouldnt take to war with the north again
1)What was the 10% plan?
ReplyDelete2)Who killed Abraham Lincoln and how?
3)What was the compromise of 1877?
4)What was Johnson's plan for restoration?
5)Why was the crop lien system important?
1. What happen in the education system?
ReplyDelete2. Name two problem during the reconstruction
3. what was Lincoln proposed during the plan of reconstruction ?
4. What was the reaction of the people to Lincoln death?
5. What is notions of freedom?
1. In the education system, both whites and blacks were able to receive an education. However, they were separated.
Delete2.Two problems during the Reconstruction period were that Republicans split between conservatives, and that Black Codes were created.
3. Lincoln proposed the Lenient Reconstruction in 1863, which recruited Whigs and amnesty to white Southerners other than high Confederate officials.
4. Lincoln's death caused a lot of anger in the North because many Northerners believed that the South had something to do with it.
5. The notions of freedom means that as a human being, everyone possesses freedom and has the right to have freedom.
1) What where the Jim Crow laws?
ReplyDelete2) Who was Andrew Johnson?
3) What were the conditions for South sates to rejoin the Union?
4) What was the "Restoration"
5) What was the compromise of 1877?
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Delete1) Jim Crow laws were state and local laws enforcing racial segregation in the Southern United States. Enacted after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued in force until 1965.
Delete2)Andrew Johnson was impeached during reconstruction.
3)The Conditions for south states to rejoin the union was to come back, and free the slaves.
4)Restoration was when Andrew Johnson became president and did his own version of the reconstruction
5) The Compromise of 1877 was when Hayes won the Election of 1876 and he promised to remove federal troops from the South.
1. What significance did the Reconstruction have, was it a success or a failure?
ReplyDelete2. What impact did the assassination of Abraham Lincoln have?
3. What did the Republican Party split into?
4. Who was Booker T Washington?
5. What was Lincoln's Reconstruction plan?
1) The reconstruction had more of a positive effect in the beginning, but then the southerners found loopholes to ensure that the freedmen don't have any real rights.
Delete2) The Union military generals said that there would be no peace amongst the South and Union, and everything would go downhill.
3) The Republican Party split into two different types the radical republicans and the conservative republicans.
4) Booker T. Washington created the Atlanta plan to allow political and social rights for African Americans, and he was a well known teacher.
5) To make the South to unite with the Union and to free all the slaves from the south with liberties nincluded.
1: Why was the KKK created?
ReplyDelete2: Who assassinated Lincoln?
3: What was the compromise of 1877?
4: What is the Reconstruction? did it succeeded? why or why not?
5: Why was Andrew Johnson impeached?
.what are some of the aftermath of the civil war?
ReplyDelete.List some changes after the civil war that succeeded for long and those that didn't?
.List some issues the north had on the southerners after the war?
. What is Johnson known for.
.Who are the Carpet beggars.
.What was the birth of Jim Cow.
1) Buildings destroyed, Properties destroyed, Death and Injury of 600,000 people.
Delete2) Change that lasted: End of slavery and Unification of the North and the South
Change that didn't last: Segregation and rules protecting African Americans
3) Depending on which Johnson you're talking about, Andrew Johnson was Vice President of Abe Lincoln, After his assassination Johnson got elected for president (1865-1869).
4) Carpetbaggers are what the south viewed as people who look to exploit and profit from the regions misfortunes.
5) A belief that white dominance over African Americans could still take place even after owning slaves is illegal
1)What was the name of the movement that originated in the South and terrorized the African Americans?
ReplyDelete2)What was an effect of Abraham Lincoln's death?
3)Who initiated the Presidential Reconstruction?
4)What was the compromised of 1877? Why is it so important?
5)Why is the Legacy's of Reconstruction significant for all African Americans?
1)KKK.
Delete2)An effect of Abraham Lincoln's death was hysteria broke out in the North with accusations of conspiracy.
3)Andrew Johnson.
4)The compromise of 1877 was a agreement that ended Reconstruction in the South and also the military was withdrawn from the South and Hayes became president.
5)The Legacy of Reconstruction was significant for all African Americans because they kind of had same equality in the American life.They had a chance to vote and go to school.
1. Who assassinated Abraham Lincoln?
ReplyDelete2.What was the crop-lien system?
3.What was the compromise of 1877?
4. How did the Jim Crow laws effect the slaves?
5. What was the purpose of Reconstruction?
1.John Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln.
Delete2. The crop-lien system was a credit system that became widely used by cotton farmers in the United States in the South. Sharecroppers and tenant farmers who did not own the land they worked obtained supplies and food on credit from local merchants.
3. The Compromise of 1877 was the compromise that put a end to the reconstruction era, set things straight in the election between Samuel Tilden and Rutherford B. Hayes, and pulled troops out of the South, permitting the overthrow of the last Republican government there, Southerners agreed to abandon the filibuster.
4. The effect the Jim Crow laws had on African Americans that were once slaves was the racial segregation in public facilities and the separation of blacks and whites. The Jim Crow laws put all things that were made for blacks in the worst condition and the things made for whites in the best condition.
5. The purpose of Reconstruction was to abolish slavery throughout the entire United States, bring the North and South back together as a Union by removing the Confederate forces and ensure that the civil rights and civil liberties of the newly emancipated blacks were respected.
1) What was Abe Lincolns definition of "Reconstruction".
ReplyDelete2) Who assassinated Abe Lincoln?
3) What was The compromise of 1877?
4) Why were some issues of Reconstruction?
5) What's the Corp - Lien system?
-His definition was to restore the Union back together.
Delete-John Wilkes Booth
-It ended up reconstruction era and settled the disputed US presidential election in 1876.
-Some people like Scalawags and carpetbaggers took advantage of the south to make money.
Terrorist organizations were also created like KKK.\
-System that allowed farmers to get more credit. They used harvested crops to pay back their loans.
1)Explain the Crop-Lien System.
ReplyDelete2)What was the Compromise of 1877?
3)What are the carpetbaggers?
4)what are the Scalawags?
5)What is KKK?
1)The Crop-line system was a credit system that was widely used by Southerns cotton farmers.Sharecroppers and tenant farmers who did not own the land they worked obtained supplies and food on credit from local merchants.
Delete2) The Compromise of 1877 was an unwritten deal that settled the intensely disputed 1876 U.S. presidential election. It ended the Reconstruction era.
3) The carpetbaggers were Northerners that moved to the South after Civil War, during Reconstruction era.
4) The Scalawags were Southerners who supported Reconstruction and Republican Party.
5)The KKK was a movement that advocated extremist believe in White Supremacy. More popular for terrorizing African Americans during the Reconstruction era.
1) what's the Freedmen Bureau?
ReplyDelete2) In what ways did the fourteenth Amendment change black lives?
3) What is the difference between Scalawags and carpetbaggers?
4) What is the Crop-Lien System?
5) what was Lincoln's 10% plan?
1)the freedmen bureau was a organization to help the recently freed black slaves.
Delete2)this allowed Africans to have the same protection as the rest of the people.
3)carpetbaggers were northerners that moved south after the civil war. scalawags were southerners that helped freed Africans slaves
4) crop lien system was farm lands that allowed slaves to live there and farm and gain 55% of the profit
5)Lincolns 10% plan was a model for reinstatement of Southern states
1.) What was the KKK?
ReplyDelete2.) Who assassinated Abraham Lincoln?
3.) What are Jim Crow Laws?
4.) What are Scalawags?
5.) What are Carpetbaggers?
1) The KKK was a Ku Klux Klan, was a clan who wanted the South to have most of the power in the United States, and who wanted slavery to be back in the states.
Delete2) The actor John Wilkes Booth shot President Abraham Lincoln in a theater in Washington D.C.
3) The Jim Crow Laws were created to enforce racial segregation in the southern states
4) A term used to describe the Southerns white Republicans who opposed secession.
5) Those Northern Republicans who were involved with Southern's politics during the Radical Reconstruction.
1. What did Abraham Lincoln thinks about the Lenient Reconstruction Plan?
ReplyDelete2. Who killed Abraham Lincoln?
3. Why was Abraham Lincoln death considered a Great Conspiracy?
4. How did Booker T. Washington influence education? What was his opinion?
5. How would you explain the relationship between tenants and sharecroppers to a fifth-grader?
1.
Delete2. John Wilkes Booth killed lincoln.
4. He help by training public school teachers.
5. TENANTS WORKED THE LAND WHILE SHARECROPPERS WORKED THE LAND.
1. Why was Lincoln killed?
ReplyDelete2. Why was the KKK formed?
3. Why did the Southerners find loop holes to go against the rights of Black people?
4.What are the Jim Crow laws?
5. Was the Freedman Bureau useful?
1.The assassination of Lincoln was planned and carried out by John Wilkes Booth because he heard licoln's speech promising suffrage to the newly freed african American population.
ReplyDelete2.The kkk was formed because it sought to overthrow the Republican state governments in the South during the Reconstruction Era, especially by using violence against African American leaders.
3.The southerners found loop holes to go against the rights of black people because they didn't want the freed slaves to vote.
4.The jim crow laws were laws that legalized segregation between blacks and whites.
5 Yes the Freedman Bureau was useful because the federal government help the freed slaves to adjust to freedom.
1.What was the major issue of the reconstruction?
ReplyDelete2.What was the freedman Bureau?
3.How did Jim Crow laws affect African Americans?
4.What was the reaction(north or south)on Lincoln's death?
5.Even after slaves got there freedom, do you think they had rights?why?
1) What was the Compromise of 1877?
ReplyDelete2) What was the KKK?
3) What are the "Black Codes"?
4) What was the reaction for Lincoln's death?
5) What are the Carpetbaggers?
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