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Chapter 18: Reconstruction and the Changing South 18.1 – Early Steps to Reunion • South was shattered after the war Victorious North? • Nearly 800,000 soldiers needed jobs • Gov’t factories were closing down • On the bright side, northern soil was relatively untouched Defeated South • Many bridges, homes, barns, and more were destroyed • Railroads were demolished; major cities like Richmond and Atlanta were gone too • Confederate money was worthless; southern banks closed • Freedmen – former slaves now free; made up of nearly four million individuals Reconstruction • The rebuilding of the South • Lincoln was very worried about the process Lincoln’s Plan • These notes are to be found on the reading I gave you Wade-Davis Bill • A rival response to Lincoln’s plan • People thought Lincoln’s was too generous • White men in the South must swear loyalty to the Union • Those who VOLUNTEERED to fight for the CSA cannot vote or hold office • Lincoln disapproved of this bill Freedmen’s Bureau • Congress and Lincoln agreed on this • Month before Lee’s surrender, Congress allowed a new agency to be formed • Named the Freedmen’s Bureau • Gave food and clothing to former slaves – Also tried to help find jobs, set up schools, and provide medical care Lincoln is Assassinated • Lincoln’s plan for Reconstruction was never passed • April 14, 1865 – Lincoln attended a play with his wife at Ford’s Theater in D.C. • Southern actor, John Wilkes Booth, snuck into Lincoln’s box • Booth shoots Lincoln in the back of the head The Original Plot • Kidnap Lincoln; plan was altered when Lee surrendered • Instead, kill Lincoln, VP Andrew Johnson, and Sec. of State William Seward • Lincoln is killed, VP Johnson is never attacked, Seward is stabbed several times but survives The End of Booth • Booth was able to escape with a co-conspirator • Almost two weeks later, Booth is trapped in a barn • Eventually, Booth is shot and killed • Co-conspirators were hanged and jailed Johnson’s Plan for Reconstruction • Milder than expected • Southern voters needed to pledge loyalty to the Union • Every state must pass the 13th Amendment – Banning slavery in the U.S. Congress Rebels • Johnson allows elections in the South to elect exCSA politicians to Congress – African Americans couldn’t vote either • Republicans in Congress were furious • Reps. in Congress didn’t allow southern representatives join in session • Reps. set up a Joint Committee on Reconstruction instead 18.2 – Radical Reconstruction • Southerners refused to respect being let back into the Union • Despite the 13th Amendment, southern legislatures passed the Black Codes – Laws that limited the rights of freedmen Black Codes • Could marry and own some property • Could not vote, own guns, or serve in juries • Some laws included the only work to be servants or farm laborers** • Sign contracts to work—no contract, punishment to work on a plantation Congress Reacts • Blame Johnson’s mild plan for the passing of the black codes • Violence broke out against freedmen • Accused the South for “trying to preserve slavery” • Johnson ignored members of Congress—Radical Republicans vowed to take control Radical Republicans • Led by Charles Sumner (MA) and Thaddeus Stevens (PA) • Two goals: break the power of wealthy plantation owners, and ensure freedmen could vote in the South Civil Rights Act 1866 • Gave citizenship to freedmen • Johnson vetoes; Congress overrides Fourteenth Amendment • Fearing the Supreme Court would rule the C.R.A. 1866 as unconstitutional, Rad. Reps. Issue the 14th Amendment • All persons born or naturalized in the U.S. are U.S. citizens with equal rights • Approved in 1868 • Johnson actually encouraged southern states to reject it! Congressional Elections of 1866 • Johnson tried to get voters to reject the Radicals • With violence breaking out on freedmen, northerners knew Johnson needed to leave • Republicans took the majority of the empty seats in Congress Radical Program • With many Reps. in Congress, easy to override vetoes • Reconstruction Act (you are responsible to understand the Reconstruction Act based on the handout) Impeached President • Johnson is still working against the Rad. Reps. • Fires several military commanders and other Radical supporters • Congress moves to impeach (remove) him from office The Trial • Feb. 24, 1868, the House votes Johnson out • Needed 2/3 vote by the Senate • However, Johnson did not really do anything illegal to be impeached • One vote shy from getting him out A New POTUS—A Familiar Face • Johnson is a lame duck for the rest of his term • Reps. elect Grant to be the next POTUS • First election for freedmen—nearly 500k vote for Grant Fifteenth Amendment • Passed in 1870, it forbade any state to deny citizens the right to vote because of race or color 18.3 – The South Under Reconstruction • Three new groups of people took over southern politics – White Southern Republicans – Northerners – African Americans White Southern Republicans • Supported new Republican gov’ts • Businessmen that disapproved of secession • Known as scalawags to CSA supporters Northerners • Many northerners came to the South after the war (opportunities) • Known as carpetbaggers to CSA supporters African Americans • With a voice, they want to be heard and take action • Sixteen were elected to Congress between 18691880 • Hiram Revels – first African American senator (finished J. Davis’s term) • Blanche K. Bruce – first to finish a full senator’s term Conservatives Resist • White southerners who supported the CSA • Racist ideals • Helped create secret societies like the Ku Klux Klan • The KKK first tried to keep African Americans and Reps. out of office – Soon turned into racist, violent animals Congress vs. the KKK • Made it illegal for the KKK to keep people from voting • KKK became more secretive and still put fear into African Americans Rebuilding the South • New schools, factories, railroads, telegraph wires • Allow women to own property • Taxes were raised which angered southerners and believed Reps. to be dishonest “Nothing but Freedom” • Freedmen found little success with jobs • No real plan was put into action • African Americans needed to test their luck or return to what they knew—farm labor • Sharecropping – rented and farmed a plot of land – Given seed and tools by owner in return for share of the crop at harvest time 18.4 – The End of Reconstruction • By the mid-1870s, Radical Republicans began losing power • Thought the South had the right to run their own gov’ts Grant’s Presidency • Grant added many buddies to his offices • Some of the men stole large sums of money from the gov’t • He did win the reelection in 1872 Election of 1876 • Read page 531. Summarize the events and results of the Election of 1876 into your notebook. Restricted Rights of African Americans • Poll Taxes – voters must pay a tax to vote – Poor African Americans could not • Literacy Tests – voters are required to read and explain a section of the Constitution – Uneducated African Americans did not pass • Grandfather Clauses – illiterate white voters were allowed to vote if their father/grandfather voted before 1/1/1867 – African Americans were not allowed to vote before this date Segregation • Segregation became the new law for the South – Legal separation of races • Schools, trains, theaters, restaurants, playgrounds, cemeteries, and hospitals were all segregated – Known as Jim Crow Laws Industry in the “New South” • Cotton production eventually recovered • Used its vast natural resources to build from the ground up Agricultural Resources • More textile mills were created to turn cotton into cloth • Tobacco industry began to rise again New Industries • Oil, coal, and iron ore mining and refineries were springing up all over the South • Southern yellow pine was a valuable source for lumber • Ready for new beginnings