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Transcript
USI.10 RECONSTRUCTION
USI.10A Identify the provisions of the 13th, 14th, & 15th
Amendments to the Constitution of the U.S. and their impact
on the expansion of freedom in America.
USI.10B Describe the impact of Reconstruction on policies
on the South.
1
USI.10 RECONSTRUCTION
PERIOD
1865 - 1877
“I Will Survive” (5)
2
LINCOLN’S 10% PLAN
• The South has suffered
enough.
• Allow states to reenter the Union with
only 10% swearing
allegiance to the
United States.
• Died before he could
carry it out.
3
President Johnson’s Plan
• Followed Lincoln’s
lead and tried to make
the Reconstruction
Period quick and
painless.
• Problem: He was
from TN (a Southern
state).
• Impeached; not guilty
by one vote
4
Johnson’s Impeachment
• Radical Republican Congress passed the “Tenure
of Office Act” which made it illegal to fire anyone
without Congress’ permission.
• President Johnson fired Edwin M. Stanton, a
Cabinet member.
• House of Representatives passed a Bill of
Impeachment.
• Senate tried President Johnson.
• He was found “Not Guilty” by one vote and
remained President until the end of his term.
5
Johnson’s Plan (details)
• States had to swear an
Oath of Allegiance to the
U.S.
• States had to ratify
(approve) the 13th
Amendment freeing the
slaves.
• He pardoned officers.
• He favored States’ Rights
as to allowing Freedmen
to vote.
• He did not support the
Freedman’s Bureau.
6
Radical Republican Plan
Congress’ Plan
• Supported the Freedman’s
Bureau
• Supported the Civil Rights
Act of 1866 outlawing
Black Codes
• States had to pass the 13th,
14th, & 15th Amendments
to rejoin the Union
• Divide the South into 5
military Districts.
• Support for equal rights
for African Americans.
7
FREEDMAN’S BUREAU
• Created schools
• Created hospitals
• Created industrial
institutes
• Created teachertraining centers
• Distributed food and
clothing
“I’ll Be There” (2)
8
RECONSTRUCTION
AMENDMENTS
• 13TH Amendment – banned slavery in the
U.S. and any of its territories.
• 14th Amendment – granted citizenship to
all persons born in the U.S. (defined
citizenship)
• 15th Amendment – gave all male citizens
the right to vote.
9
Who are These People?
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Scalawags
Carpetbaggers
Freedmen
Fugitives
Radical Republicans
Sharecroppers
Tenant farmers
Jim Crow
“Looking for Love” (5)
10
SCALAWAG
• A Southerner who supported the North
during the Civil War
• Considered a traitor by the other
Southerners.
11
CARPETBAGGER
• A Northerner who went South after the
Civil War to make money or get rich
quick.
• Despised by the Southerners.
12
FREEDMAN
• A freed slave after the Civil War.
• He had nothing but the clothes on his/her
back.
• Freedman’s Bureau was created to help
them (education, jobs, food, etc.).
• Discriminated against by Southerners who
blamed them for the war.
13
FUGITIVES
• People who fled either North to the cities
for work or to the West to escape
discrimination.
• Most of the fugitives were ex-slaves
(freedmen).
• Also poor whites who had lost everything in
the war.
14
RADICAL REPUBLICANS
• Members of Congress (from Northern states
only) who wanted the South to pay for the
Civil War.
• Thaddeus Stevens was one of the leaders.
• Johnson was impeached because he fired
Edwin M. Stanton (Cabinet member) who
was a Radical Republican.
15
SHARECROPPERS
• Freedmen became sharecroppers since they owned
no land and had no money to supply seeds for a
crop.
• Landowners received most of the crop and the
sharecroppers received a place to stay and some of
the crop that they worked to raise.
• They usually ended up owing the land-owner
money at the end of the harvest. (debt)
“In the Ghetto” (2)
16
TENANT FARMERS
• People (mostly freedmen) who lived on a
farm and worked for the owner in order to
have a place to stay and to get food.
• Poor farmers who worked very hard to
survive.
17
JIM CROW
• Not a real person.
• Laws that were passed to control the
Freedmen (ex-slaves).
• Segregation laws passed in most formerly
Confederate States.
“Jimmy Crackcorn” (1)
18
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1866
• Gave equal rights to African Americans.
• When Reconstruction ended in 1877 most
of the rights were lost until the 1960’s and
Reverend Martin Luther King’s Civil Rights
Movement.
“Let My People Go” (1)
19
Voting Problems for Freedmen
• “Grandfather Clause” – blacks could vote if their
grandfathers had voted.
• Poll tax – everyone had to pay to vote; blacks had
no money to pay.
• Literacy tests – people could vote, if they could
pass a test to prove literacy.
• KKK (Ku Klux Klan) – organization formed by
Nathan Bedford Forrest to keep blacks under
control; cruel and used “fear” as a weapon.
20