* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Reconstruction Era
Hampton Roads Conference wikipedia , lookup
Tennessee in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
United States presidential election, 1860 wikipedia , lookup
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution wikipedia , lookup
Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps wikipedia , lookup
Lost Cause of the Confederacy wikipedia , lookup
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution wikipedia , lookup
Issues of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Carpetbagger wikipedia , lookup
Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution wikipedia , lookup
Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era wikipedia , lookup
Reconstruction era wikipedia , lookup
The Reconstructio n Era 1865-1877 LINCOLN’S VIEW OF RECONSTRUCTION • A matter of restoring legitimate state governments • Federal government should NOT punish the South –“with malice towards none, with charity for all…to bind up the nations wounds…” LINCOLN’S RECONSTRUCTION PLAN • Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction – Dec. 1863 –Pardons for oath of allegiance • 10% Plan –May form state gov’t as soon as 10% take oath of allegiance RADICAL REPUBLICANS’ PROPOSAL • Wade-Davis Bill – Congress responsible for Reconstruction not the President • Majority of voters must take oath of allegiance not 10% • Lincoln pocket vetoed the bill • Radicals angry – want to punish the south for secession Lincoln’s Reconstruction Plan does not go into effect • Assassinated by John Wilkes Booth • Andrew Johnson becomes president – Southern democrat–Continues Lincoln’s plan • Radical Republicans challenge Johnson’s plan PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION • Re-admission requirements –Declare secession illegal –Swear allegiance to the Union –Do not pay Confederate debts –Ratify 13th Amendment • All southern states except TX readmitted by Dec. 1865 STEPS TAKEN TO HELP FORMER SLAVES • Congress organized the Freedman’s Bureau to help blacks find jobs, protect rights, establish hospitals and schools • 13th Amendment passed prohibiting slavery Southern Whites Limit the Freedoms of Ex-Slaves • White-controlled state governments pass laws called “BLACK CODES” –Allow worker exploitation –Allow whipping –Limit speech, travel, deny voting rights, imprisonment and bar court testimony against whites Southern Whites Limit the Freedoms of Ex-Slaves • White-controlled state governments pass laws called “BLACK CODES” –Allow worker exploitation –Allow whipping –Limit speech, travel, deny voting rights, imprisonment and bar court testimony against whites Southern Whites Limit the Freedoms of Ex-Slaves • In the first two years after the Civil War, 5000 AfricanAmericans are murdered by whites- often by lynching • Secret organizations, such as the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, are founded by whites to intimidate Blacks CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION • Northern Republicans are convinced that Johnson’s Plan is not working – Black Codes, the KKK, and Confederate officials still in office at state and federal levels cited as evidence • Radical Republicans are the most critical • Thaddeus Stephens (PA) is the most vocal critic- leads the Radical Republicans The Reconstruction Act of 1867 is passed. Known as Radical Reconstruction or Congressional Reconstruction, this act clearly was designed to punish the South for the Civil War, increase the rights of African-Americans, disfranchise ex-confederates, and delay the readmission of states until republican governments established CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION PLAN • Require the majority of voters in a secessionist state to take an oath of loyalty and a second “Iron-clad” oath stating that they did not support the Confederacy • Individual governments had to outlaw slavery • Former confederate officials were banned from voting for state legislators CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION PLAN • Pass the 14th Amendment • All qualified voters, blacks included were to elect a governor and a state legislature • Other Reconstruction Acts will follow to strengthen enforcement of the first act. JOHNSON VETOS THE ACT • Unfair to the South • Congress over-rides the veto • Invalidate the state governments re-admitted under the Lincoln and Johnson Plans. Only Tennessee will escape because they ratified the 14th Amendment before the Act was passed TEN STATES UNDER MARTIAL LAW • States that had not ratified the 14th Amendment were divided into five military districts • Military will oversee elections concerning new state constitutions and governments • Once conditions met Reconstruction will be complete IMPEACHMENT CRISIS • Johnson uses executive power to impede Congressional Reconstruction. –Replaced sympathetic radical military officials with conservatives –Defied the Tenure of Office Act and fires Secretary of War Stanton, a radical sympathizer IMPEACHMENT CRISIS • House of Representatives voted to impeach Johnson • Senate trial held- Johnson’s lawyers argue that Tenure of Office Act is unconstitutional and not guilty of a crime indictable in court • Johnson remains in office- The vote fell one vote short of the twothirds needed to remove him from office RECONSTRUCTION GOVERNMENTS • Most states are re-admitted by 1870. • Republicans will control the South until 1877 –President U.S. Grant will uphold tough reconstruction policies –Carpetbaggers and Scalawags –Southern Blacks RECONSTRUCTION ENDS • Use of violence keeps blacks away from the polls • Northerners lost interest in Reconstruction • Compromise of 1877- Rutherford B. Hayes is awarded the Presidency in exchange for a promise to removed federal troops from the south. Some troops remain but do not serve a political function ACHIEVEMENTS OF RECONSTRUCTION • States restored to the Union and rebuilding begun. • Public schools established • 14th and 15th Amendments passed Reconstruction Amendments • 13th Amendment- Abolished slavery • 14th Amendment- Blacks are citizens of the United States – Intended to strengthen 1866 Civil Rights Act • 15th Amendment- Prohibited denial of suffrage because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude Reconstruction’s Failures • Failed to solve the problems of blacks –Too poor to afford land, many former slaves are exploited under the sharecropping system –Southern economic expansion is slowed by westward expansion –“Jim Crow” laws passed to limit the rights of blacks “Jim Crow” • Southern state governments passed laws forcing segregation and creating barriers to voting rights, such as poll taxes and grand-father clauses. • The Supreme Court will uphold “Jim Crow” in 1895 by its ruling in Plessy vs. Ferguson Black Resistance to “Jim Crow” • Ida B. Wells- anti-lynching crusader, appealed to the federal government to stop lynching • Booker T. Washington- equality via vocational education- accepted social segregation • W.E.B. DuBois- education is meaningless without equality- strive for higher education (college) – Founded the NAACP Because Reconstruction was implemented by Republicans, white southerners voted for Democratic candidates. This created a Bloc known as the “Solid South.”