
Chapter 14 - TeacherWeb
... The Civil War devastated the South, and everyone agreed it needed to be rebuilt. This period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction. President Lincoln proposed the Ten Percent Plan to rebuild the South. According to the plan, when 10 percent of the voters of a state took an oath of loyalty to the Un ...
... The Civil War devastated the South, and everyone agreed it needed to be rebuilt. This period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction. President Lincoln proposed the Ten Percent Plan to rebuild the South. According to the plan, when 10 percent of the voters of a state took an oath of loyalty to the Un ...
Reconstruction: Rebuilding a Divided Nation
... because of the new job competition from freedmen. Poor white families began migrating to frontier lands such as Mississippi and Texas to find new opportunities. Three Reconstruction Plans Most southerners accepted the war’s outcome and focused on rebuilding their lives. In Washington, however, peace ...
... because of the new job competition from freedmen. Poor white families began migrating to frontier lands such as Mississippi and Texas to find new opportunities. Three Reconstruction Plans Most southerners accepted the war’s outcome and focused on rebuilding their lives. In Washington, however, peace ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
Reconstruction Powerpoint
... Lincoln was assassinated in 1865 VP Andrew Johnson tried to continue Lincoln’s policies: –His Presidential Reconstruction plan was lenient towards Southerners –States could come back into the USA once they ratified the 13th Amendment ...
... Lincoln was assassinated in 1865 VP Andrew Johnson tried to continue Lincoln’s policies: –His Presidential Reconstruction plan was lenient towards Southerners –States could come back into the USA once they ratified the 13th Amendment ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
Chapter 16 - Reconstruction
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved in R ...
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved in R ...
Reconstruction-Chapter 16 Holtx
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved in R ...
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved in R ...
Main Idea 1: Reconstruction governments helped reform the South.
... government to force change in the South. ...
... government to force change in the South. ...
Reconstruction - Waynesville R
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved i ...
... government to force change in the South. – Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts were leaders. – Radical Republicans, like the moderate Republicans, believed the Black Codes were cruel. – Unlike the moderates, they wanted the federal government to be more involved i ...
Europeans in the New World - Fort Johnson Middle School
... Cotton gin – revolutionized agriculture in SC; invented by Eli Whitney; unified the state in slavery Compromise of 1850 – California entered US as a free state; fugitive slave law was included to appease Southerners Popular Sovereignty – settlers voted on whether to become a slave state or a free st ...
... Cotton gin – revolutionized agriculture in SC; invented by Eli Whitney; unified the state in slavery Compromise of 1850 – California entered US as a free state; fugitive slave law was included to appease Southerners Popular Sovereignty – settlers voted on whether to become a slave state or a free st ...
The Civil War
... Americans sobered to the realities of war What do you need to effectively wage war in the 19th century? ...
... Americans sobered to the realities of war What do you need to effectively wage war in the 19th century? ...
The Civil War
... Although slavery ended, African Americans did not achieve full equality during the next 100 years. The “Jim Crow Era” is a long period in which African Americans in the South were denied the full rights of American citizenship though segregation laws. The Black Codes were laws which restricted the ...
... Although slavery ended, African Americans did not achieve full equality during the next 100 years. The “Jim Crow Era” is a long period in which African Americans in the South were denied the full rights of American citizenship though segregation laws. The Black Codes were laws which restricted the ...
Reconstruction
... 2. State constitutions must give African American men the right to vote and to hold office 3. Require states to ratify the 14th amendment and 15th amendment (guarantees African Americans the right to vote) ...
... 2. State constitutions must give African American men the right to vote and to hold office 3. Require states to ratify the 14th amendment and 15th amendment (guarantees African Americans the right to vote) ...
The women`s suffrage movement
... high protective tariffs to protect Northern manufacturers from foreign competition. The Southern states developed an agricultural economy consisting of a slavery-based system of plantations in the lowlands along the Atlantic and in the Deep South, and small subsistence farmers in the foothills and ...
... high protective tariffs to protect Northern manufacturers from foreign competition. The Southern states developed an agricultural economy consisting of a slavery-based system of plantations in the lowlands along the Atlantic and in the Deep South, and small subsistence farmers in the foothills and ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... Tip on Taking Quizzes: In this and the next Notice the things that the North starts to do after the fall mid-term elections of 1866. A 19 This method was one of the ways to deal with the South's actions such as delays in passing black suffrage: ...
... Tip on Taking Quizzes: In this and the next Notice the things that the North starts to do after the fall mid-term elections of 1866. A 19 This method was one of the ways to deal with the South's actions such as delays in passing black suffrage: ...
Chapter 22 Rejoinders
... against the planter aristocrats, despite the fact that he himself ultimately owned a few slaves. e. Johnson was not a lifelong Republican. The Republicans, seeking to shore up Lincoln’s support in his re-election bid in 1864, sought support from the War Democrats and other pro-Southern elements. Sin ...
... against the planter aristocrats, despite the fact that he himself ultimately owned a few slaves. e. Johnson was not a lifelong Republican. The Republicans, seeking to shore up Lincoln’s support in his re-election bid in 1864, sought support from the War Democrats and other pro-Southern elements. Sin ...
B. - Springtown ISD
... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South
... Confederate leaders -Radical Republicans favored harsher measures that would break up and rebuild the South’s institutions and ban former Confederates from holding office -Johnson wanted to pardon most Southerners but humiliate Confederate leaders ...
... Confederate leaders -Radical Republicans favored harsher measures that would break up and rebuild the South’s institutions and ban former Confederates from holding office -Johnson wanted to pardon most Southerners but humiliate Confederate leaders ...
Civil War/Reconstruction - Hicksville Public Schools
... 17. Which inference is most clearly supported by the information in this table? (1) Slavery decreased throughout the South with the end of the African slave trade. (2) The enslaved population began to decline after 1840. (3) The transcontinental railroad spread slavery outside the South. (4) Slaver ...
... 17. Which inference is most clearly supported by the information in this table? (1) Slavery decreased throughout the South with the end of the African slave trade. (2) The enslaved population began to decline after 1840. (3) The transcontinental railroad spread slavery outside the South. (4) Slaver ...