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Reconstruction After the War • Mississippi faced many challenges after the Civil War • The state’s cities were severely damaged and many buildings and stores had been burned • Our previous wealth before the war no longer existed • Many men returned back home unable to work due to injury or others just did not return Freedmen • 400,000 freedmen faced greater hardships • They were homeless, uneducated, and free for the first time – Many wandered town to town looking for jobs – Searched for family members lost due to slavery • New relationships between whites and blacks had to be developed – Blacks feared that old masters would try to reenslave them – Whites found it difficult to accept blacks as free and equal • Freedmen looked forward to practicing their right to vote and hold a political office • Whites wondered how they would be treated as well… Would they be punished for their war efforts???? Would they be allowed to vote in new governments????? • The right to own land, vote, and get an education was a freedmen’s way to independence • Congress created the agency the Freedmen’s Bureau which helped former slaves with food, shelter, education, health care, and find jobs Free Land?????? • Blacks felt that the land that was seized or confiscated during the war would be sold or leased to them • However, President Johnson ordered for all confiscated land to be returned to its former owners Presidential Reconstruction • Abraham Lincoln created a plan to rebuild the South and restore the Union before the war was over • Known as Reconstruction, had two simple steps: – 1. All southerners, except high ranking Confederates, would be pardoned after taking an oath of loyalty – 2. When 10% of voters took oath, the state would be permitted to form a legal government and rejoin the Union. • Lincoln was assassinated in April 1865 at Ford’s Theater Johnson and Reconstruction • Much like Lincoln, though Johnson expanded the group of southerners who were not covered by the general pardon • Johnson required that states write new state constitutions that abolished slavery. • Republicans were disappointed with both plan… they wanted stronger requirements • Due to pressure from Congress, Johnson added three more requirements – 1. repeal secession ordinances – 2. Repudiate their war debt – 3. Ratify the 13th Amendment • Reconstruction began in MS in June 1865 • William Sharkey who opposed secession became temporary governor Constitutional Convention of 1865 • Mississippi was the first state to hold a constitutional convention to write a new constitution • They made few changes to state government • Most delegates were apart of MS prewar ruling class • Though the president urged Mississippians to give suffrage to educated blacks and those who owned property, they delegates ignored his request. • They made it clear that they did not want any black participation in MS’s government Black Codes • When new legislature met, legislators passed four acts that became known as Black Codes – Placed harsh economic and social restrictions on blacks – Became clear that the Codes were designed to give the state control over blacks • First act: Civil Rights Act of 1865, provided two benefitsLegalized marriages and Gave blacks the right to sue in state courts, however it: – Prohibited interracial marriages – Prevented blacks from testifying in court cases with whites – Limited black land ownership • Could not carry firearms and any other weapons • Blacks could be arrested for assembling with permission – If they could not pay fine, they were hired out to anyone who would pay fine for them • When MS did not ratify the 13th Amendment it troubled the freedmen and angered many northern whites • As a result of these black codes, Congress refused to seat MS’s Congressional delegates. • Congress then passed laws designed to weaken the Black Codes and guarantee blacks rights • 14th Amendment- made blacks full citizens of the United States and in the individual states – Could not prohibit any person the right of life, liberty, or property