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Reconstruction Encyclopedia Article 796 Views RECONSTRUCTION, period after the American Civil War during which the seceded states were restored to normal relations with the Union. Lincoln's 10 Percent Plan. The question of how to reconstruct the Union emerged well before the Civil War ended. President Abraham Lincoln wanted to begin the process of reconciliation as Union armies occupied each seceded state. Lincoln initially administered the affairs of the conquered Confederate states in an informal manner, but on Dec. 8, 1863, he announced a specific Reconstruction program. All southerners (except high-ranking Confederate officials) could obtain a full pardon and restoration of rights after taking an oath that pledged future loyalty to the Union and acknowledged the end of slavery. When 10 percent of the 1860 voting population in a given state had taken this oath, these citizens could vote in elections that would create new state governments and new state constitutions. After a state government had been formed and a constitution recognizing the end of slavery ratified, that state would once again be eligible for representation in Congress and Lincoln would consider the state fully readmitted to the Union. Many northerners believed that the president's Reconstruction plan treated the South too leniently. Others complained that Lincoln's program discriminated against the freed men, because under it blacks could not take the loyalty oath, vote, or hold office. Lincoln probably conceived of the 10 percent plan as a wartime measure only, hoping that its lack of vindictiveness would shorten the war by enticing the rebellious states back into the Union. After Confederate general Robert E. Lee surrendered in 1865, Lincoln hinted that he might announce a new Reconstruction policy, but he was assassinated before he could do so. Johnson's Reconstruction Policy. Vice-President Andrew Johnson succeeded to the presidency upon Lincoln's death. Throughout his political career, Johnson had been an outspoken foe of the aristocracy of rich slaveholders who controlled southern politics before the war, and this convinced northerners that he would deal harshly with the South. In most respects, however, Johnson continued the policy initiated by Lincoln. Under Johnson's Reconstruction plan, announced on May 29, 1865, the president would appoint governors for each of the rebellious states. These governors would convene constitutional conventions, and only those who took the loyalty oath prescribed by Lincoln could vote for delegates to these conventions. High-ranking Confederate officials and persons owning land worth $20,000 or more could vote only if they were personally pardoned by the president. Once new state governments had been so organized, Johnson would deem the states to have rejoined the Union. The Black Codes. Johnson predicted that under his program, the nation could complete the task of Reconstruction in a matter of months. Instead, the perception that the president was treating the South leniently dashed any hope for a speedy national reconciliation. Despite protests from the North, Johnson allowed the governors he selected to appoint prominent secessionists to office. He was also very liberal in his pardoning policy, granting clemency to the most unrepentant rebels. In northern eyes, however, the worst affront was the institution by the new southern governments of the so-called Black Codes. These laws were meant to circumscribe black economic options and thus force the freedmen to continue working as plantation laborers. The codes imposed prohibitive taxes on freedmen who tried to pursue nonagricultural occupations, restricted the blacks' ability to rent land or own guns or dogs, instituted harsh vagrancy laws meant to intimidate the freedmen, and created apprenticeship statutes that allowed children of “unfit“ parents to be bound out to their former masters in what was nothing less than a continuation of slavery. Streaming Consequently, by the time Congress convened in December 1865, many Republicans had concluded that Johnson's policy needed modification. A faction known as the Radical Republicans argued that Congress should completely overhaul the program. The Radicals believed that Reconstruction represented a “golden moment“ during which they could swiftly institute far-reaching social and economic changes in the South. Led by Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts and Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, these politicians sought to take control of Reconstruction from the president, and to use a more powerful federal government to guarantee civil and political rights (including the right to vote) for the freedmen. Stevens and others even advocated that the government distribute land to the freedmen in order to ensure their economic independence. Moderate Republicans outnumbered the Radicals, however, and the moderates believed that Johnson's program could succeed with only minor adjustments. These modifications were embodied in two bills that received congressional approval in early 1866. The bill concerning the FREEDMEN'S BUREAU, (q.v.) extended the life of the agency that helped blacks make the transition from slavery to freedom by providing economic assistance and legal protection, especially 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 Black Codes had been repealed, the southern states continued to deny blacks equality before the law by arguing that they were not citizens. The Civil Rights Bill, which was passed in Congress with nearly unanimous Republican support in March 1866, attempted to redress this situation by defining all persons born in the U.S. (except American Indians) as citizens. The bill went on to specify the rights of citizens, including the right to sue; make contracts; give evidence in court; hold, convey, and inherit property; and enjoy all “fundamental rights“ belonging to whites. Finally, the bill allowed federal attorneys to bring suit against violators if state courts refused to act. In his veto message, Johnson argued that the Civil Rights Bill transferred too much power from the states to the federal government. His message smacked of blatant racism, with its argument that guaranteeing rights for blacks would result in discrimination against whites, and the claim that miscegenation would increase if the bill became law. Congressional Reconstruction. Johnson's vetoes, along with the southern intransigence that had culminated in the Black Codes, dramatically altered the northern conception of what Reconstruction should accomplish. Moderates who had earlier rejected the Radicals' call for a farreaching, congressional directed Reconstruction policy, now embraced the idea as the only way to bring about fair treatment for the freedmen in postwar society. This coalition of moderates and Radicals commenced their attack on Johnson by overriding his veto of the Civil Rights Bill, the first time in U.S. history that Congress had overridden a presidential veto on a matter of significance. Congress then defied Johnson by passing another Freedmen's Bureau Bill and overriding his veto of that measure. Finally, fearing that when southerners returned to Congress they would combine with northern Democrats to repeal these laws, Republicans in Congress initiated the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. This measure reiterated the citizenship provision of the Civil Rights Bill, and attempted to force the South to enfranchise blacks by threatening to reduce southern congressional representation if states denied them the right to vote. Johnson, who opposed the amendment, made it the central issue of the 1866 congressional elections. Reflecting how far to the left the nation had swung during his first 18 months in office, those condemning Johnson's policies routed his supporters at the polls, ensuring that the Radicals would control Congress by an even greater margin. Buoyed by this public endorsement, Congress acted quickly to eliminate Johnson's remaining power over Reconstruction. Passed over his veto, the Reconstruction Acts of March 1867 divided all the Confederate states except Tennessee into five military districts. Military commanders in the districts would supervise new constitutional conventions for the rebellious states; only when these bodies created new constitutions that included black suffrage and the permanent disfranchisement of Confederate leaders, and ratified the 14th Amendment, would these states be eligible for representation in Congress. Reluctantly, the southern states established new governments that met these requirements. Johnson was clearly powerless to prevent this Reconstruction policy from proceeding. When he tried to defy Congress one last time by firing the secretary of war, Edwin M. Stanton, Congress impeached the president. Though they disliked Johnson, many in Congress believed that ousting the president would set a dangerous precedent; as a result, his accusers failed to muster the two-thirds vote in the Senate needed for conviction. Congressional Reconstruction brought about a complete revolution in southern life and society. The changes wrought were perhaps most dramatically felt in the political arena. Blacks had significant political potential after gaining the right to vote, especially in states such as South Carolina, Mississippi, and Louisiana, where they made up a majority of the population. Initially, they played a relatively small role in the Reconstruction governments, even in states where they constituted a majority. The white Republicans who held most of the offices in these early Reconstruction governments were Unionists from noncoastal regions whose residents had long resented the political dominance of rich planters. A few northerners who had migrated to the South after the war also played leading roles in the governments (see CARPETBAGGERS,). Soon, however, blacks began participating more actively in politics. By the end of Reconstruction, they had won 17 seats in Congress (15 in the House and 2 in the Senate), and an equal number of important statewide offices; even so, with the possible exception of South Carolina, blacks never achieved political power proportionate to their numbers. Retreat from Reconstruction. After the Reconstruction governments had been created, southern whites set to work to destroy them. The tactic they found most effective was violence. Beginning in 1868, the KU KLUX KLAN, (q.v.) and similar organizations terrorized southern Republicans, especially blacks, in an effort to keep them from voting or participating in political affairs. Although Civil War hero Ulysses S. Grant won the 1868 presidential election with the slogan “Let Us Have Peace,“ the violence continued unabated. Grant and Congress tried various means to curb the Klan, but found it nearly impossible to prevent bloodshed. Only a massive military presence in the South could have suppressed the Klan, but by this time northerners were becoming increasingly unwilling to provide such a force, hoping now to put the sectional conflict behind them. In 1869 Congress initiated the 15th Amendment to the Constitution, which attempted to guarantee the continuation of black suffrage by outlawing the denial of voting rights on the grounds of race, but the defeat of a version with fewer loopholes provided additional proof that the influence of the Radicals was waning. As violence continued to drive both black and white Republicans from the polls, Democrats regained control of the southern governments (a process they called “redemption“), although Democratic success also resulted partly from a revolt against the higher taxes imposed by the ambitious Republican governments. By mid-1876 Republicans maintained control only in South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana, but the presidential contest of that year helped end Republican power in those states as well. When the election results were contested, a tacit compromise was arranged: Democrats would allow the Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayes to assume the presidency, and in return Republicans would not challenge Democratic victories in those three states, despite the wholesale violence that had contributed to them. With this so-called Compromise of 1877, Reconstruction came to an end. Nearly a century would pass before southern blacks regained the civil and political rights that they had briefly enjoyed during that tumultuous era. See also AFRICAN-AMERICANS,; CIVIL RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES,; CIVIL WAR, AMERICAN,. For further information on this topic, see the Bibliography, section 1157. Reconstruction. Description Citations Reconstruction was the period after the American Civil War during which the seceded states were restored to normal relations with the Union. Citation (MLA) Reconstruction Funk & Wagnalls, 2005 . Encyclopedia Article. Discovery Education. Web. 25 October 2013. <http://www.discoveryeducation.com/>. More Information Student Copyright: © 2005 Publisher: Funk & Wagnalls Citation (APA) Funk & Wagnalls, (2005). Reconstruction. [Encyclopedia Article]. Available from http://www.discoveryeducation.com/ Citation (Chicago Manual of Style) Funk & Wagnalls. Reconstruction From Discovery Education. Encyclopedia Article. 2005 . http://www.discoveryeducation.com/ (accessed 25 October 2013). Stats 796 Views