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Transcript
Agenda
• Go over 2.5 – Lecture Guide
• Ch. 2 Section and Chapter Review- Due Tuesday
• Test Block Day – Open Notebook
Reconstruction Begins
(plans begin before the war ends)
• The South was a defeated region with a
devastated economy at the conclusion of the
Civil War.
• The president and Congress had to deal with
Reconstruction, or rebuilding the South and
the country after the Civil War. They also had
to decide under what terms and conditions
the former Confederate states would rejoin
the Union.
Lincoln’s Plan
• Offered a pardon to all who took an oath of loyalty to
US and accepted the Union’s proclamation regarding
the abolition of slavery
• Confederate gov’t officials or military officers could not
take the oath
• When 10% of state took oath they could reform state
government
• Goal: reconcile the South and the Union instead of
punishing it for treason
Radical Republicans
• The Radical Republicans had three main goals.
• They wanted to prevent the Confederate leaders
from returning to power after the war.
• They wanted the Republican Party to become
powerful in the South.
• They wanted the federal government to help
African Americans achieve political equality by
guaranteeing them the right to vote in the South.
Reconstruction
• Moderate Republicans thought Lincoln’s plan
was too lenient on the South and the Radical
Republicans’ plan was too harsh.
• By the summer of 1864, the moderates and
the radicals came up with a plan that they
both could support. The Wade-Davis Bill was
introduced and passed in Congress.
Wade-Davis Bill
• Majority of adult white men in former
confederacy take oath of allegiance
• State could then hold a Const. Convention to
create new const.
• Those attending convention had to take a 2nd
oath that they had never fought against
Union or helped Confed. during the war
Wade-Davis Bill
• State Constitutions had to:
• Abolish slavery
• Reject all debts the state had acquired as part of the
confederacy
• Deprive all former Confederate government
officials and military officers the right to vote
• Goal: harsher punishment for those who fought in war
Lincoln’s Response
• Lincoln thought the plan was too harsh and
would alienate many whites in the South, so
he blocked the bill with a pocket veto. He did
this by letting the session of Congress expire without
signing the bill.
Reconstruction
• As a result of the refugee crisis, Congress
established the Freedmen’s Bureau. This
bureau was to feed and clothe war refugees in
the South using army surplus supplies. The
bureau also tried to help freedmen find work
and negotiate pay and hours worked on
plantations.
Lincoln’s assassination
• April 9, 1865 – Lee surrenders- Civil War
ends
• April 15, 1865 – John Wilkes Booth
assassinates President Lincoln at Ford’s
Theatre
• Why did JWB feel that he had no choice but
to assassinate the President?
Johnson’s Plan
• Vice President Andrew Johnson became president after
Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. Johnson agreed with
Lincoln that a moderate policy was needed to bring the
South back to the Union.
• In May 1865, Andrew Johnson issued a new
Proclamation of Amnesty.
• This plan offered to pardon all former citizens of the
Confederacy who took an oath of loyalty to the Union
and to return their property and included having each
former Confederate state ratify the Thirteenth
Amendment abolishing slavery
Reconstruction
• The new Southern state legislatures passed laws,
known as black codes, that severely limited
African Americans’ rights in the South. The
codes varied from state to state, but in general,
they were written with the intention of keeping
African Americans in conditions similar to
slavery. The black codes enraged Northerners.
• In late 1865, House and Senate Republicans
created a Joint Committee on Reconstruction to
develop their own program for rebuilding the
Union.
Civil Rights Act
• In March 1866, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of
1866.(#7)
• The act gave citizenship to all persons born in the
United States, except Native Americans.
• It guaranteed the rights of African Americans to
own property and be treated equally in court.
• It granted the U.S. government the right to sue
people who violated these rights.
Congressional Plan
• Fourteenth Amendment
• Granted citizenship to all persons born or
naturalized in US
• No state can deprive person of life liberty
or property without due process of law.
• No state can deny person equal protection
under the law
Congressional Plan
• Military Reconstruction Act
• Divided South into districts with a Union general in
charge of each in order to maintain peace and protect
rights of persons and property
• All states had to write new Const. acceptable to Congress
• Give right to vote to all adult males, regardless of race
• Had to ratify 14th amend. Before electing officials to
Congress
Grant elected
• Johnson did not run for election in 1868.
General Ulysses S. Grant was the Republican
candidate. The presence of Union soldiers in the
South helped African Americans vote in large
numbers. Grant easily won the election.
Republicans kept majorities in both houses
of Congress.
15th Amendment
• The Republican-led Congress proposed the
Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution. This
amendment said that the right to vote could not be
denied on account of race, color, or previous
servitude.(#9) The amendment became part of the
Constitution in 1870.
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
• During Reconstruction, many Northerners moved to
the South. Many were elected or appointed to
positions in the state governments. Southerners
referred to these Northerners as carpetbaggers
because some brought suitcases made of carpet
fabric. Many Southerners viewed the Northerners as
intruders who wanted to gain from the South’s
postwar troubles.
• Southerners also disliked scalawags—
white Southerners who worked with the Republicans and
supported Reconstruction
Reconstruction
• Thousands of formerly enslaved people took part in
governing the South. They were delegates to state
conventions, local officials, and state and federal
legislators.
• The Republican Party became powerful in the South
and started many major reforms. The reforms included
repealing the black codes, establishing state hospitals,
and rebuilding roads and railways damaged during the
Civil War.
Reconstruction
• To pay for Republican reforms, many Southern
state governments borrowed money and imposed
high property taxes.
• Many Southern whites resented
African Americans and the Republican-ruled
governments. Some Southerners organized secret
societies such as the Ku Klux Klan to undermine
the Republican rule.
Reconstruction Ends
• Reconstruction came to an end when
• Enforcing policies became difficult because of
the rise of Democrats in Congress
• The Republicans were becoming more concerned
with government scandals and economic
problems.
• Many Southerners wanted a “New South” with a
strong industrial economy instead of a mostly
agricultural one. (#14)
After Reconstruction
• After Reconstruction ended, African Americans returned
to plantations owned by whites, where they worked for
wages or became tenant farmers, paying rent for the land
they farmed.
• Most tenant farmers ended up becoming
sharecroppers. They paid a share of their crops to cover their
rent and farming costs.
After Reconstruction
• Although sharecropping allowed African
American farmers to control their own work
schedule and working conditions, it also
trapped them in poverty because they could
not make enough money to pay off their
debts and buy their own land.