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UNIT 4 THE UNION IN PERIL I. Slavery and Politics The south, is
UNIT 4 THE UNION IN PERIL I. Slavery and Politics The south, is

... economy and the actions of the radicals. Southern Democrats return in strength to Congress.  Here is the Deal that ends Reconstruction – Presidential Election of 1876 – Rutherford Hayes vs Tildon. Tildon wins popular vote but not electoral vote. Democrats will let the Republican Hayes win the presi ...


... governors to supervise the drafting of new state constitutions and agreed to readmit each state provided it ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery. Hoping that Reconstruction would be complete by the time Congress reconvened a few months later, he declared Reconstruction over at ...
Chapter 22 – Reconstruction
Chapter 22 – Reconstruction

... 2. re-enslavement of blacks (back to square one) C. What did Republicans ram through Congress? Wade-Davis Bill Required: 1. 50% of states’ voters take an oath of allegiance 2. stronger safeguards for emancipation D. What did Lincoln do? Pocket veto (refused to sign it after Congress adjourned) E. Wh ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... States only had to nullify their acts of secession, abolish slavery, and refuse to pay Confederate war debts (which hurt the Southern economy even more) This allowed Confederate leaders to take charge of Reconstruction in the South. Some still wore their rebel uniforms!! ...
Fall 2015 Civil War and Reconstructing the Union(4).
Fall 2015 Civil War and Reconstructing the Union(4).

... •Actor, Southern sympathizer, Spy •Assassinated Lincoln, Ford’s Theatre, 1865, Lee surrender, Appomattox ...
1860_to_T._Roosevelt - Northside Middle School
1860_to_T._Roosevelt - Northside Middle School

... a series of laws defining the status of freedmen Black codes, limited freedmen's rights to assemble and travel, and restricted their access to public institutions. The codes instituted curfew laws and laws requiring blacks to carry special passes. ...
The Reconstruction Era
The Reconstruction Era

... vote fell one vote short of the twothirds needed to remove him from office ...
Chapter 16 - Course Notes
Chapter 16 - Course Notes

... state could rejoin the Union. ii. A minority of voters (equal to at least 10 percent of those who had voted in the election of 1860) would have to take an oath of allegiance to the Union and accept emancipation. 1. Then this minority could create a loyal state government. 2. Lincoln’s plan excluded ...
Chapters 22 and 23 - North Ridgeville City Schools
Chapters 22 and 23 - North Ridgeville City Schools

... Johnson Walks the Impeachment Plank  The purpose was to freeze the secretary of war, Edwin M. Stanton, into office.  Stanton was a holdover of Lincoln and although outwardly loyal to Johnson, he was secretly serving as a spy and informer for the radicals. ...
Georgia and the American Experience
Georgia and the American Experience

... • Farms were in ruins; not enough food • Homes, railways, bridges,roads were destroyed or in need of repair • Banks were closed – Confederate money was worthless • The state owed $20,000,000 in war debt • 25,000 Georgians had died of wounds or disease – many more were crippled and could not work ...
Reconstruction: North and South
Reconstruction: North and South

...  Growing acrimony on both sides of the Reconstruction debates—race riots in Memphis and New Orleans ...
Name Reconstruction Study Guide Explain the 13th amendment
Name Reconstruction Study Guide Explain the 13th amendment

... They wanted to ensure that the Civil War had not been fought in vain and that the freed slaves would indeed be free. They refused to allow the former Confederates elected as senators and representatives by the southern states to take their seats in Congress. They tried to help protect freedmen from ...
Name Date Per Chapter 12 Section 1: Rebuilding the Nation
Name Date Per Chapter 12 Section 1: Rebuilding the Nation

... _____ 6. President Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan meant that ten percent of African Americans were allowed to become full citizens. If false, replace “of African Americans were allowed to become full citizens” with _____ 7. The Wade-Davis Bill required 50 percent of voters sign a loyalty oath before a s ...
Reconstruction Plans Reconstruction Period - time
Reconstruction Plans Reconstruction Period - time

... Black Codes ● Black Codes - laws to control the freedom of free blacks in the South ● In many areas of the South, blacks not having a job (blacks were arrested and taken to “labor camps” as punishment to work for no pay just like slavery). Couoldn’t have guns or buy land in certain places. ● Civil R ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... 1871. They used the military in the south to attack the Klan to stop them from terrorizing blacks and white Republicans. By 1872 the federal government, through a combination of legislation and military intervention, had broken the Ku Klux Klan's back and produced a dramatic decline in violence thro ...
File - Mr. Fisher`s Class
File - Mr. Fisher`s Class

... had to swear an oath of loyalty to the United States and accept the ban on slavery. When 10 percent of the voters in any state took the oath, that state could be accepted back into the Union. This was called the Ten Percent Plan. Some supported the Wade-Davis Bill instead. The procedure of the Wade- ...
13.1 - Trimble County Schools
13.1 - Trimble County Schools

... December 1863, when he proposed the Ten Percent Plan for Reconstruction.  The plan was forgiving to the South.  It offered a pardon, an official forgiveness of a crime, to any Confederate who would take an oath of allegiance to the Union and accept the federal policy on slavery.  It denied pardon ...
reconstruction - JJonesUSHIstory
reconstruction - JJonesUSHIstory

... Radical Republicans • The Radical Republicans in Congress, led by Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania and Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, did not want to let the South come back into the US so easily. • The Radical Republicans had three main goals. • They wanted to prevent the ...
Reconstruction – 1865-1877
Reconstruction – 1865-1877

... They blamed the war on these states. ...
Effects and results of Civil war
Effects and results of Civil war

... • Growing fears of labor competition for white workers and farmers because of the growing number of free blacks prompted several northern states to adopt Black Codes • Whether or not slavery would b able to expand westward or not for this affected the balance of power between the north and the south ...
Civil War and Reconstruction Timeline
Civil War and Reconstruction Timeline

... The first rail line to cross the continent is completed The Union Pacific is joined with the Central 1869 Pacific; the news is flashed by telegraph and the nation celebrates from coast to coast. This railroad network will be the single most influential factor in the emergence of a new industrial age ...
Source: The end of the US Civil War (1861
Source: The end of the US Civil War (1861

... money,  and  credit  were  virtually  nonexistent.  People  in  many  southern  states  faced   actual  starvation.  Institutions  such  as  churches,  schools,  and  city  and  county   governments  had  ceased  to  function.  The  federal ...
Lincoln`s Plan of Reconstruction - Laurens County School District 56
Lincoln`s Plan of Reconstruction - Laurens County School District 56

... The two opposing candidates for President in 1876 were Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio, Republican, and Samuel J. Tilden of New York, Democrat. Tilden polled a larger popular vote than Hayes and also led in electoral votes, but he was one electoral vote short of the total necessary for victory. But ther ...
henretta3e_ch15
henretta3e_ch15

... cases of discrimination against blacks. • Lyman Trumbull, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, proposed a Civil Rights Bill that declared all persons—regardless of race—born in the United States to be citizens and gave them equal rights. • Even the most moderate Republicans demanded that the federal ...
Reconstruction File - Northwest ISD Moodle
Reconstruction File - Northwest ISD Moodle

... • Ku Klux Klan: a “secret” group that aimed at keeping blacks from getting full equality by using fear, violence, and intimidation tactics. – The Klan wanted Democrats from the South to be in charge so that former slaves would be kept powerless. – To intimidate former slaves, the KKK often burned do ...
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Reconstruction era

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