Standard IV: The student will understand
... • Reconstruction Act – South divided into 5 military districts – Southern states would not be admitted into the Union until they ratified the 14th Amendment – Black citizens must be granted the right to vote – Former Confederate officials couldn’t hold public office ...
... • Reconstruction Act – South divided into 5 military districts – Southern states would not be admitted into the Union until they ratified the 14th Amendment – Black citizens must be granted the right to vote – Former Confederate officials couldn’t hold public office ...
L2-recon-why-15
... Reconstruction Plans Presidential Reconstruction According to this plan, what did • former confederate states have to do to be readmitted to the Union? What happened to former Confederate leaders under this ...
... Reconstruction Plans Presidential Reconstruction According to this plan, what did • former confederate states have to do to be readmitted to the Union? What happened to former Confederate leaders under this ...
Reconstruction: The Rebuilding of a Nation
... that demonstrate true remorse for their actions, and I do not say that suffrage (voting) is now the right of the freed Negro. No, sir, white men alone must manage the South.” ...
... that demonstrate true remorse for their actions, and I do not say that suffrage (voting) is now the right of the freed Negro. No, sir, white men alone must manage the South.” ...
answer the questions
... 8. About what fraction of all American war deaths occurred in the Civil War The War Ends, Reconstruction Follows 1. When did the Civil War end? 2. What were the three Civil War Amendments? ...
... 8. About what fraction of all American war deaths occurred in the Civil War The War Ends, Reconstruction Follows 1. When did the Civil War end? 2. What were the three Civil War Amendments? ...
reconstruction - Neshaminy School District
... and controlled by the Republican Party. c. They wanted to punish the South for having caused the Civil War. 2. The leaders of the Radical Republicans were Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts and Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania. C. Many Republicans distrusted President Johnson, a ...
... and controlled by the Republican Party. c. They wanted to punish the South for having caused the Civil War. 2. The leaders of the Radical Republicans were Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts and Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania. C. Many Republicans distrusted President Johnson, a ...
Reconstruction - PACE Challenge
... against the Black Codes. Johnson, believing that the freedom deserved no such special assistance, outraged most Republicans by vetoing this bill. The president further angered Republicans by vetoing the moderates' second proposal, the Civil Rights Bill. Even after the most outrageous portions of the ...
... against the Black Codes. Johnson, believing that the freedom deserved no such special assistance, outraged most Republicans by vetoing this bill. The president further angered Republicans by vetoing the moderates' second proposal, the Civil Rights Bill. Even after the most outrageous portions of the ...
U.S. History Core 100, Goal 3
... Amnesty (pardon) to all Southerners taking an oath of loyalty to the U.S. and accepting its proclamation of slavery 10% of a state’s voters in 1860 presidential election take oath, can organize new state government Former members of CSA’s government would not receive pardon New state gov’ts ...
... Amnesty (pardon) to all Southerners taking an oath of loyalty to the U.S. and accepting its proclamation of slavery 10% of a state’s voters in 1860 presidential election take oath, can organize new state government Former members of CSA’s government would not receive pardon New state gov’ts ...
Introduction to Reconstruction
... to hold state or federal office South would be occupied by federal troops and governed by army generals in order to maintain law and order Southern states must be punished for the death and destruction of the war Southern states will not accept equal rights for blacks, therefore they must be forced ...
... to hold state or federal office South would be occupied by federal troops and governed by army generals in order to maintain law and order Southern states must be punished for the death and destruction of the war Southern states will not accept equal rights for blacks, therefore they must be forced ...
Reconstruction
... The Hon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War, came to Savannah soon after its occupation by the forces under my command, and conferred freely with me as to the best methods to provide for the vast number of negroes who had followed the army from the interior of Georgia, as also for those who had alre ...
... The Hon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War, came to Savannah soon after its occupation by the forces under my command, and conferred freely with me as to the best methods to provide for the vast number of negroes who had followed the army from the interior of Georgia, as also for those who had alre ...
Reconstruction: 1865-1877
... Radical Republican group passed a bill • Required 50% of voters to take “iron clad oath” • of allegiance to the Union • Gave African Americans civil liberties • No voting rights ...
... Radical Republican group passed a bill • Required 50% of voters to take “iron clad oath” • of allegiance to the Union • Gave African Americans civil liberties • No voting rights ...
Radical Reconstruction
... Name: ________________________________________________ Date: _____________________________ Class: ____ ________________________________________________ ...
... Name: ________________________________________________ Date: _____________________________ Class: ____ ________________________________________________ ...
Reconstruction student copy
... (because there were no Democrats) was now in a position to run Reconstruction as they saw fit. ...
... (because there were no Democrats) was now in a position to run Reconstruction as they saw fit. ...
Reconstruction - Suffolk Public Schools Blog
... Lincoln and Johnson’s Reconstruction plans Tennessee was excepted because it had ratified the 14th Amendment Divided the 10 remaining Confederate states into military districts each headed by a Union general ...
... Lincoln and Johnson’s Reconstruction plans Tennessee was excepted because it had ratified the 14th Amendment Divided the 10 remaining Confederate states into military districts each headed by a Union general ...
people.ucls.uchicago.edu
... o Most forms of elected office. o In South Carolina, blacks held a majority of seats in the state house of representatives. ● Unfortunately, this new black political freedom was something that blacks would not have again for around one-hundred years. ...
... o Most forms of elected office. o In South Carolina, blacks held a majority of seats in the state house of representatives. ● Unfortunately, this new black political freedom was something that blacks would not have again for around one-hundred years. ...
ch22powerpoint
... • His plan: disenfranchised certain leading Confederates, called for special state conventions which would repeal secession, repudiate Confederate debt, and ratify the 13th Amendment. • States that did these things would be quickly restored to the Union. • Johnson also handed out pardons in great nu ...
... • His plan: disenfranchised certain leading Confederates, called for special state conventions which would repeal secession, repudiate Confederate debt, and ratify the 13th Amendment. • States that did these things would be quickly restored to the Union. • Johnson also handed out pardons in great nu ...
3 Final Exam Review Pre Civil War through
... ■ From 1865 to 1877, blacks were protected & given rights as citizens –13th Amendment ended slavery –14th Amendment made it illegal to discriminate against people due to race, gender, religion –15th Amendment gave all black men the right to vote –Freedman’s Bureau created to ...
... ■ From 1865 to 1877, blacks were protected & given rights as citizens –13th Amendment ended slavery –14th Amendment made it illegal to discriminate against people due to race, gender, religion –15th Amendment gave all black men the right to vote –Freedman’s Bureau created to ...
Quiz Questions: 1. What are several examples of “Black Codes?” 2
... 2. How were African Americans kept from voting in the South. 3. What did the 15th Amendment do? 4. What did the 14th Amendment do? 5. What did the 13th Amendment do? 6. How was sharecropping like slavery? 7. Why did reconstruction end (three reasons) 8. If local and state governments fail to protect ...
... 2. How were African Americans kept from voting in the South. 3. What did the 15th Amendment do? 4. What did the 14th Amendment do? 5. What did the 13th Amendment do? 6. How was sharecropping like slavery? 7. Why did reconstruction end (three reasons) 8. If local and state governments fail to protect ...
civil war 2012
... The deaths in 1852 of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster left no leader of national stature, but only sectional spokesmen, such as W. H. Seward, Charles Sumner, and Salmon P. Chase in the North and Jefferson Davis and Robert Toombs in the South. With the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) and the consequent ...
... The deaths in 1852 of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster left no leader of national stature, but only sectional spokesmen, such as W. H. Seward, Charles Sumner, and Salmon P. Chase in the North and Jefferson Davis and Robert Toombs in the South. With the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) and the consequent ...
Reconstruction (1865
... End of the Civil War -South surrenders on April 9, 1865 -War left South devastated ...
... End of the Civil War -South surrenders on April 9, 1865 -War left South devastated ...
File - Mrs. Poorman`s Class
... **Radical Plan for Readmission Civil authorities in the territories were subject to military supervision. Required new state constitutions, including black suffrage and ratification of the 13th and ...
... **Radical Plan for Readmission Civil authorities in the territories were subject to military supervision. Required new state constitutions, including black suffrage and ratification of the 13th and ...
Reconstruction Vocabulary Important People, Events and terms of
... read and write. Since most ex-slaves were illiterate this test was a problem for them. However, if new voters could pay and were literate, then the third rule was used to eliminate them from the voting records. The ________________________________ effectively eliminated all former slaves and free Bl ...
... read and write. Since most ex-slaves were illiterate this test was a problem for them. However, if new voters could pay and were literate, then the third rule was used to eliminate them from the voting records. The ________________________________ effectively eliminated all former slaves and free Bl ...
Name - Wsfcs
... The upper South will join the Confederacy when Lincoln asked states to provide troops after the Confederates took Fort Sumter. Four slave states, known as the border states, did not secede. The Civil War had begun. The North’s advantages included numbers and manufacturing. The South’s advantages inc ...
... The upper South will join the Confederacy when Lincoln asked states to provide troops after the Confederates took Fort Sumter. Four slave states, known as the border states, did not secede. The Civil War had begun. The North’s advantages included numbers and manufacturing. The South’s advantages inc ...
documents-how-successful-was
... Harper's Weekly cartoon (on the right) from October 1874 depicting White League and Klan opposition to Reconstruction The White League was an American white paramilitary group. It started in 1874 that operated to turn Republicans out of office and intimidate freedmen from voting and political organi ...
... Harper's Weekly cartoon (on the right) from October 1874 depicting White League and Klan opposition to Reconstruction The White League was an American white paramilitary group. It started in 1874 that operated to turn Republicans out of office and intimidate freedmen from voting and political organi ...
Reconstruction
... Lincoln’s Reconstruction Plan Abraham Lincoln had thought about the process of restoring the Union from the earliest days of the war. His guiding principles were to accomplish the task as rapidly as possible and ignore calls for punishing the South. ...
... Lincoln’s Reconstruction Plan Abraham Lincoln had thought about the process of restoring the Union from the earliest days of the war. His guiding principles were to accomplish the task as rapidly as possible and ignore calls for punishing the South. ...
Justify and discuss the colonists reasons for the
... The due process clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution most nearly means that (1) all labor-management contracts must be reviewed by a commission of the federal government (2) members of minority groups must be given preferential treatment in employment (3) the selection of t ...
... The due process clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution most nearly means that (1) all labor-management contracts must be reviewed by a commission of the federal government (2) members of minority groups must be given preferential treatment in employment (3) the selection of t ...
Carpetbagger
""Carpetbaggers"" redirects here. For the Harold Robbins novel, see The Carpetbaggers. For the film adaptation, see The Carpetbaggers (film). For the World War II special operations unit see Operation Carpetbagger.In United States history, a carpetbagger was a Northerner who moved to the South after the American Civil War, during the Reconstruction era (1865–1877). White Southerners denounced them fearing they would loot and plunder the defeated South. Sixty Carpetbaggers were elected to Congress, and they included a majority of Republican governors in the South during Reconstruction. Historian Eric Foner argues: most carpetbaggers probably combine the desire for personal gain with a commitment to taking part in an effort ""to substitute the civilization of freedom for that of slavery"".... Carpetbaggers generally supported measures aimed at democratizing and modernizing the South – civil rights legislation, aid to economic development, the establishment of public school systems.The term carpetbagger was a pejorative term referring to the carpet bags (a form of cheap luggage at the time) which many of these newcomers carried. The term came to be associated with opportunism and exploitation by outsiders. The term is still used today to refer to an outsider who runs for public office in an area where he or she does not have deep community ties, or has lived only for a short time.