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Civil War and Reconstruction – Notes/Review After Slavery The South was in disarray. Government, transportation, the economy, agriculture – all had failed. Without slavery, the plantation system collapsed. Farm owners struggled to keep their property. Poor African Americans and whites tried their best to survive off the land. Some became tenant farmers: farming land they rented. Other became sharecroppers: people who worked the owner’s land, and received a share of the crops in return. Many workers fell into debt and were forced to work years and years to pay it off – not much different than slavery! The Freedman’s Bureau Created to assist families in the war-ravaged South. Its primary mission was to assist African Americans adjust to their new freedom. It founded hospitals, and helped northern teachers come South and help create educational opportunities for African Americans. The Bureau encouraged African Americans to sign contracts with landowners – bargaining their labour for money or a share of the crops. Reconstruction Some thought the South should be punished for the war. Lincoln argued that the task was to restore the Union. Lincoln offered amnesty to all Southerners who pledged loyalty to the Union. Once 10 percent of a state made the pledge, it could be re-admitted into the Union. Lincoln was assassinated soon after realizing that he would need to compromise with Radical Republicans who wanted to punish the South. Andrew Johnson became president after Lincoln’s death, and tried to carry out his policies, but he was very unpopular. In the summer of 1865, when Congress was in recess, Johnson implemented his reconstruction program. His conditions for re-admission into the union were: abolishment of slavery, repeal of secession, and repudiation of war debts. When Congress returned in December, every state except Texas had followed the plan and asked to return to the Union. However, many Congressmen expressed alarm that former Confederate leaders had assumed positions of power in the South. Congress refused to allow Southern members to take their seats in Congress. White Men and Black Codes The Radicals were also concerned about the treatment of former slaves in the South. Like Lincoln, President Johnson believed that the federal government’s involvement concerning race ended with the abolishment of slavery. Southern governments set up laws called ‘black codes’ that made it clear that African Americans were to be treated as a class of subordinate status. In no Southern state were African Americans allowed to vote, testify against whites, handle weapons, or serve on juries. Some blacks were arrested for being ‘vagrants’, and their labour was sold off to the highest bidder. The North Responds In 1865 Congress began enacting policies to restore the Union. They proposed bills to provide economic aid to African Americans and protection of their civil rights. When these bills were passed, Johnson vetoed them. In April, 1866, Congress passed the Civil Rights Bill, which granted citizenship to African Americans and gave the federal government power to intervene to protect the rights of freed men and women. Johnson vetoed this bill, but Congress overrode his veto. The 14th Amendment Congress thought the Civil Rights Bill might be declared unconstitutional, so they passed the Fourteenth Amendment in June, 1866. The amendment defined citizenship to include African Americans, and required that no state deny any person “equal protection of the laws.” Radicals won an overwhelming victory in the 1866 congressional elections, giving them a mandate to enact their own reconstruction program. Radical Reconstruction Goals: replace Southern governments with military rule, ensure former Confederates would have no role in governing the South, and ensure that African Americans’ right to vote was protected. By 1868, Louisiana, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina, and South Carolina had regained statehood. By 1870, each of the 10 states under military rule had been readmitted to the Union. Government during Reconstruction Scalawags: white Southern Union sympathizers. Carpetbaggers: Northerners who came South. Many confederates were barred from participating in government, so many ‘carpetbag’ governments rose to power in the South. They were corrupt and inefficient, but also spend funds to rebuild industry and establish schools. Johnson continued to struggle for control of reconstruction with Radical Republicans in Congress. Johnson survived impeachment proceedings, but a Radical Republican, Ulysses S. Grant, won the presidential election of 1868. Restoring Southern Power The Ku Klux Klan helped Southern whites gain control of their state governments. By 1876, only South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana did not have governments controlled by white Democrats, many of whom were former Confederates. After the disputed presidential election of 1876, the Republicans were forced to agree to several Democrat demands. A Southerner would get the job of postmaster general. Funds were provided for improvements in the South. And federal troops were forced to withdraw from Southern states. Without troops to protect them, African Americana lost many of their civil rights, and the carpetbag governments collapsed. After Reconstruction Segregation: Southern states passed “Jim Crow” laws which legally separated blacks from whites. The New South: Northern financiers allied with white Southern leaders to improve the South’s economy. Agriculture and transportation production soared. Few gains for African Americans Reconstruction offered only temporary help to freed blacks. After reconstruction, many blacks experienced similar conditions to slavery. They were bound to the white power structure as sharecroppers and tenant farmers. They were unable to get what they needed most: land and education. However, the constitution now included the 14th and 15th amendments, which included African Americans as citizens and guaranteed their right to vote. These would provide the legal basis to challenge segregation and Jim Crow laws in the 1900s.