Civil Rights and Race Relations
... Presidential Reconstruction and then for his unsuccessful opposition to Radical Reconstruction. As a firm believer in states’ rights, he was content to see the re-establishment of the Southern white Confederate elite and white supremacy in 1865. As a ...
... Presidential Reconstruction and then for his unsuccessful opposition to Radical Reconstruction. As a firm believer in states’ rights, he was content to see the re-establishment of the Southern white Confederate elite and white supremacy in 1865. As a ...
questions about the “varying viewpoints”
... The new President Andrew Johnson was politically inept and personally contentious. His attempt to implement a moderate plan of Reconstruction, along the lines originally suggested by Lincoln, fell victim to Southern whites’ severe treatment of blacks and his own political blunders. Republicans impos ...
... The new President Andrew Johnson was politically inept and personally contentious. His attempt to implement a moderate plan of Reconstruction, along the lines originally suggested by Lincoln, fell victim to Southern whites’ severe treatment of blacks and his own political blunders. Republicans impos ...
CH 18 Slides - Doral Academy Preparatory
... Reconstruction, Congress tried to remove him from office. • On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach, or bring formal charges against, Johnson. • The President could be removed from office if two thirds of the Senate found him guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Duri ...
... Reconstruction, Congress tried to remove him from office. • On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach, or bring formal charges against, Johnson. • The President could be removed from office if two thirds of the Senate found him guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Duri ...
No Slide Title
... Reconstruction, Congress tried to remove him from office. • On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach, or bring formal charges against, Johnson. • The President could be removed from office if two thirds of the Senate found him guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Duri ...
... Reconstruction, Congress tried to remove him from office. • On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach, or bring formal charges against, Johnson. • The President could be removed from office if two thirds of the Senate found him guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Duri ...
Chapter 22 Reading Guide
... The new President Andrew Johnson was politically inept and personally contentious. His attempt to implement a moderate plan of Reconstruction, along the lines originally suggested by Lincoln, fell victim to Southern whites’ severe treatment of blacks and his own political blunders. Republicans impos ...
... The new President Andrew Johnson was politically inept and personally contentious. His attempt to implement a moderate plan of Reconstruction, along the lines originally suggested by Lincoln, fell victim to Southern whites’ severe treatment of blacks and his own political blunders. Republicans impos ...
The war passed from words to stones which the white children
... the Former Confederate states were the two great issues of the Reconstruction era. Americans disagreed about both of them. The formation of a national consensus on freedom and reunification began with the demands and hopes of three broad groups: the Republican party, the more than 4 million former s ...
... the Former Confederate states were the two great issues of the Reconstruction era. Americans disagreed about both of them. The formation of a national consensus on freedom and reunification began with the demands and hopes of three broad groups: the Republican party, the more than 4 million former s ...
Section 2 cont`d
... · Freedmen would pay rent for the land they farmed by giving the landowner a percentage of their crops. · In addition, freedmen would purchase seed, tools, and other supplies from the landowner. * As a result, freedmen were in constant debt to the landowners and were never able to earn a profit. If ...
... · Freedmen would pay rent for the land they farmed by giving the landowner a percentage of their crops. · In addition, freedmen would purchase seed, tools, and other supplies from the landowner. * As a result, freedmen were in constant debt to the landowners and were never able to earn a profit. If ...
Reconstruction And Its Effects
... A map of the South under Military Reconstruction. Two years after the end of the war, in large part because Andrew Johnson had been discredited by actions by states formed under his reconstruction plan, Reconstruction began again, this time under the control of Congress. The Military Reconstruction ...
... A map of the South under Military Reconstruction. Two years after the end of the war, in large part because Andrew Johnson had been discredited by actions by states formed under his reconstruction plan, Reconstruction began again, this time under the control of Congress. The Military Reconstruction ...
The Era of Reconstruction, 1865–1877
... a U.S. senator just a few years before the country descended into war. When Tennessee seceded, Johnson remained loyal to the Union and stayed in the Senate. As Union troops marched on his home state of North Carolina, Lincoln appointed him governor of the then-occupied state of Tennessee, where he s ...
... a U.S. senator just a few years before the country descended into war. When Tennessee seceded, Johnson remained loyal to the Union and stayed in the Senate. As Union troops marched on his home state of North Carolina, Lincoln appointed him governor of the then-occupied state of Tennessee, where he s ...
Black and White Disenfranchisement: Populism, Race, and Class
... keen understanding of the necessity to form coalitions with other groups who also were being excluded from power and lacked meaningful control over their own existence. They built strategic coalitions with labor, with blacks, and, subject to time, place, and conditions, with Republicans (or black Re ...
... keen understanding of the necessity to form coalitions with other groups who also were being excluded from power and lacked meaningful control over their own existence. They built strategic coalitions with labor, with blacks, and, subject to time, place, and conditions, with Republicans (or black Re ...
Reconstruction Lesson Packet
... Reconstruction refers both to the period in which the South was rebuilt after the Civil War and to the various plans for rebuilding. Abraham Lincoln wanted to given generous terms to the South to encourage an orderly restoration of the Union. Radical Republicans in Congress, however, wanted to punis ...
... Reconstruction refers both to the period in which the South was rebuilt after the Civil War and to the various plans for rebuilding. Abraham Lincoln wanted to given generous terms to the South to encourage an orderly restoration of the Union. Radical Republicans in Congress, however, wanted to punis ...
Violations of Articles
... (the primary criteria for exercising voting rights), decisions about who could vote were left to the individual states. In 1790, the federal legislature passed a Naturalization Law, which decreed that only “free white” immigrants could become American citizens. This law excluded Native Americans fro ...
... (the primary criteria for exercising voting rights), decisions about who could vote were left to the individual states. In 1790, the federal legislature passed a Naturalization Law, which decreed that only “free white” immigrants could become American citizens. This law excluded Native Americans fro ...
Document
... freedom they acquired as a result of the Civil War. Their failings -- especially the fact that they failed to extend to women the same rights of citizenship afforded black men -suggest the limits of change even at a time of revolutionary transformation. Moreover, the history of these amendments und ...
... freedom they acquired as a result of the Civil War. Their failings -- especially the fact that they failed to extend to women the same rights of citizenship afforded black men -suggest the limits of change even at a time of revolutionary transformation. Moreover, the history of these amendments und ...
16 The Union Reconstructed
... summer of 1865. To understand the bittersweet nature of Reconstruction, we must look at the state of the nation after the assassination of President Lincoln. ...
... summer of 1865. To understand the bittersweet nature of Reconstruction, we must look at the state of the nation after the assassination of President Lincoln. ...
Reconstruction - Cobb Learning
... After 10% of the voters in a state took the oath, the state could form a government and ask to be readmitted to the Union ...
... After 10% of the voters in a state took the oath, the state could form a government and ask to be readmitted to the Union ...
Reconstruction
... Originally passed to protect freedmen from the KKK. Unlawful to deny civil rights Federal government given authority to prosecute and send military assistance if states failed to cooperate. / ...
... Originally passed to protect freedmen from the KKK. Unlawful to deny civil rights Federal government given authority to prosecute and send military assistance if states failed to cooperate. / ...
Reconstruction in Louisiana
... you will need to convince Hahn that they will be qualified. The Reconstruction Acts of 1867: Background Despite Lincoln’s letter, the convention that drew up the 1864 Louisiana constitution did not enfranchise freed blacks. While many Republicans, even in the North, did not favor enfranchising black ...
... you will need to convince Hahn that they will be qualified. The Reconstruction Acts of 1867: Background Despite Lincoln’s letter, the convention that drew up the 1864 Louisiana constitution did not enfranchise freed blacks. While many Republicans, even in the North, did not favor enfranchising black ...
Reconstruction Notes PowerPoint
... carpetbaggers because they often carried suitcases made of carpet materials. • Southerners did not like carpetbaggers. © Erin Kathryn 2015 ...
... carpetbaggers because they often carried suitcases made of carpet materials. • Southerners did not like carpetbaggers. © Erin Kathryn 2015 ...
PDF - first - The Wilson Quarterly
... pute. For if the state suicide theory prevailed, then Articles I and IV* of the Constitution gave Congress the obligation to establish the terms upon which these former states could be re-created. But if the treasonous leadership concept was accepted, then all a president had to do was use his power ...
... pute. For if the state suicide theory prevailed, then Articles I and IV* of the Constitution gave Congress the obligation to establish the terms upon which these former states could be re-created. But if the treasonous leadership concept was accepted, then all a president had to do was use his power ...
Ch14 Reconstruction Comes to Georgia
... however, were run by white Democrats—most of whom were ex-Confederate officers or officials. Though freeing the slaves, many of the southern legislatures had passed Black Codes—laws limiting the political and civil rights of former slaves. Radical Republicans were furious. They decided to seize contro ...
... however, were run by white Democrats—most of whom were ex-Confederate officers or officials. Though freeing the slaves, many of the southern legislatures had passed Black Codes—laws limiting the political and civil rights of former slaves. Radical Republicans were furious. They decided to seize contro ...
Reconstruction
... Scalawags were Southerners who became members of the Republican party Southerners were Democrats during the Civil War To become a member of the Republican party meant you were a traitor ...
... Scalawags were Southerners who became members of the Republican party Southerners were Democrats during the Civil War To become a member of the Republican party meant you were a traitor ...
Reconstruction Packet
... 5) “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges . . . of citizens . . . nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, with out due process of law. . . .” The major purpose of these provisions of the 14th Amendment was to (1) limit the power of th ...
... 5) “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges . . . of citizens . . . nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, with out due process of law. . . .” The major purpose of these provisions of the 14th Amendment was to (1) limit the power of th ...
Reconstruction - Cobb Learning
... After 10% of the voters in a state took the oath, the state could form a government and ask to be readmitted to the Union ...
... After 10% of the voters in a state took the oath, the state could form a government and ask to be readmitted to the Union ...
Reconstruction Notes
... voted 126-47 to charge Johnson with a crime impeach the president After an 11 week trial, the Senate fell 1 vote short of removing the president from office Johnson successfully argued that he had not committed a “high crime or misdemeanor” ...
... voted 126-47 to charge Johnson with a crime impeach the president After an 11 week trial, the Senate fell 1 vote short of removing the president from office Johnson successfully argued that he had not committed a “high crime or misdemeanor” ...
Reconstruction Revisited - Iowa City Community School District
... The Radicals were led by Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania in the House and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts in the Senate. Radical Republicans had two main goals. First, they wanted to break the power of wealthy planters who had long ruled the South. Second, they wanted to ensure that freedmen receiv ...
... The Radicals were led by Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania in the House and Charles Sumner of Massachusetts in the Senate. Radical Republicans had two main goals. First, they wanted to break the power of wealthy planters who had long ruled the South. Second, they wanted to ensure that freedmen receiv ...
Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era
Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era deals with the efforts made by Southern states of the former Confederacy at the turn of the 20th century in the United States to prevent their black citizens from registering to vote and voting. Their actions defied the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, ratified in 1870, which was intended to protect the suffrage of freedmen after the American Civil War.Considerable violence and fraud had accompanied elections during Reconstruction, as the white Democrats used paramilitary groups from the 1870s to suppress black Republican voting and turn Republicans out of office. After regaining control of the state legislatures, Democrats were alarmed by a late 19th-century alliance between Republicans and Populists that cost them some elections. In North Carolina's Wilmington Insurrection of 1898 (long called a race riot by whites), white Democrats conducted a coup d'etat of city government, the only one in United States history. They overturned a duly elected biracial government and widely attacked the black community, destroying lives and property.Ultimately, white Democrats added to previous efforts and achieved widespread disenfranchisement by law: from 1890 to 1908, Southern state legislatures passed new constitutions, constitutional amendments, and laws that made voter registration and voting more difficult. This turn of events achieved the intended result of disenfranchising most of the black citizens, as well as many poor whites in the South.The Republican Party was nearly eliminated in the region for decades, until the late 20th century, when a wholesale party realignment took place. Southern Democrats controlled the southern states based on white supremacy. As Congressional apportionment was based on the total population, the Southern white Democrats, the Southern bloc, had tremendous legislative power for decades. Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment could have reduced Congressional representation for states that denied suffrage on racial grounds, but this provision was not enforced, as opponents of the Southern bloc could not overcome their political power.In 1912, Woodrow Wilson gained an Electoral College bonus as a result of this black (Republican) disenfranchisement; he was elected as the first southern President since 1856. He was re-elected in 1916, in a much closer presidential contest. During his first term, Wilson instituted overt racial segregation throughout federal government workplaces and established racial discrimination in hiring. During World War I, American military forces were segregated, with black soldiers poorly trained and equipped; they were often sent on suicide missions. Disenfranchisement had other far-reaching effects in Congress, where the Democratic South gained ""about 25 extra seats in Congress for each decade between 1903 and 1953."" Also, the Democratic dominance in the South meant that southern Senators and Representatives were entrenched in Congress, gaining seniority privileges and control of chairmanships of important committees, as well as leadership of the national Democratic Party. During the Great Depression, legislation establishing numerous national social programs were passed without the representation of African Americans, leading to gaps in program coverage.In addition, because black Southerners were not listed on local voter rolls, they were automatically excluded from serving jury duty in local courts.Racial segregation in the U.S. military was ended by Executive Order of President Harry S. Truman in 1948, after World War II. Disenfranchisement did not end until after passage of federal civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s, which included authority for the federal government to monitor voter registration practices and elections and enforce constitutional voting rights.