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AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION 1865 – 1877 President Johnson’s political blunders and southern white reluctance to allow slaves civil rights led to military Reconstruction of the South Problems facing the South following the Civil War 1. Assisting the freed slaves 2. Reintegrating the southern states into the Union 3. Deciding who would direct the Reconstruction process The South was economically devastated and socially changed by emancipation 1. Slave owners reluctantly confronted the end to slavery 2. Blacks took their first steps in freedom 3. The Freedom Bureau President Johnson was politically inept and did not get along with Congress. 1. He attempted to pass a moderate plan for reconstruction 2. Was not accepted by southern whites or radical republicans. Republicans imposed harsh military Reconstruction on the South after their gains in the 1866 congressional elections. The Southern states reentered the Union with new radical governments. Embittered whites hated the radical governments and mobilized the Ku Klux Klan to restore white supremacy. Congress impeached Johnson but failed to convict him. In the end, Reconstruction failed 1 AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION 1865 – 1877 KEY TERMS AND NAMES Reconstruction Period of rebuilding the nation after the Civil War 13TH Amendment Freed the slaves 14th Amendment Gave African Americans citizenship 15th Amendment Banned states from denying African Americans the right to vote. [Suffrage] Scalawag White southerners who joined the Republican Party. Carpetbagger Northerners who moved to the South following the Civil War. Tenant farmer Rented land from landowners for cash Sharecropping Andrew Johnson System in which landowners gave a few acres of land to farm workers in return for portion of their crops. # A Family of Sharecroppers and caption page 485 A secret group of white Southerners who used violence to keep blacks from voting # Ku Klux Klan, Tennessee 1868 President after Lincoln’s assassination Rutherford B Hayes President who ended Reconstruction in 1877 Ku Klux Klan 2 AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION 1865 – 1877 Social structure had been destroyed: Economics: 1. Banks and businesses went bankrupt - caused inflation. 2. Factories closed 3. Transportation system completely destroyed 4. Agriculture: livestock killed, crops burned 5. Slave labor system destroyed 1. Plantations burned to the ground. 2. Charleston, Richmond, Atlanta had been burned to the ground SOCIAL STRUCTURE ECONOMICS MAJOR PROBLEMS FACING THE SOUTH FOLLOWING THE CIVIL WAR EMANCIPATED SLAVES FREEDOM BUREAU Some slaves resisted emancipation Others beat their former masters Many slaves moved westward. Most slaves were unskilled, without money or property Did not know how to make decisions Congress created the Freemen's Bureau in 1865 Provided food, education, and clothing 40 acres of free land to black settlers. Bureau was backed by Radical Republicans President Johnson vetoed its renewal 3 AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION 1865 - 1877 LINCOLN’S 10% PLAN States could reenter the Union if 10% of the voters pledged their allegiance to the United States States had to form new state governments RADICAL REPUBLICANS JOHNSON'S PLAN Feared that southern aristocrats would Agreed with Lincoln's 10 % plan return to power under Lincoln's 10% plan Southerners who had $20,000 in assets Introduced the Wade-Davis Bill: It required were not allowed to vote that 50% of state voters take an oath of Repealed all Confederate votes allegiance Lincoln vetoed the Wade-Davis Bill Radical Republicans believed that the rebels had forfeited all their rights when they seceded from the Union # Impeachment Drama and Caption page 496 BLACK CODES Written by the new Southern state legislatures. Regulated the social, economic, and political affairs of the freed slaves Ensured a cheap labor source for southern planters Severe penalties imposed on slaves who broke their labor contracts Blacks were not allowed to serve on juries Many blacks became sharecroppers and tenant farmers Early in 1866 one congressman quoted a Georgian: “The Blacks eat, sleep, move, live, only by the tolerance of the whites, who hate them. The blacks own basically nothing but their bodies; their former masters own everything and will sell them nothing. If a black man draws even a bucket of water from a well, he must first get the permission of a white man, his enemy…. If he asks for work to earn his living, he must ask it of a white man; and the whites are determined to give him no work, except on such terms as will make him a serf and impair his liberty 4 AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION JOHNSON CLASHES WITH THE RADICAL REPUBLICANS New state constitutions allowed for new legislators in the federal government Most were former congressmen or members of the aristocratic families Republican Congress had passed laws during the Civil War that favored the North. [Morrill Tariff - Pacific Railroad Act - Homestead Act] Republicans feared the South would gain power in both houses of Congress - blacks were no longer counted as 3/5 of a person Republicans feared Southern Democrats would join Northern Democrats Democrats could: 1. Dismantle Republican economic policies by lowering tariffs 2. Reroute the transcontinental railroad 3. Repeal the Homestead Act December 6, 1865 the rebellious states were restored Johnson vetoed renewal of the Freedmen Bureau Vetoed the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 which gave Blacks their citizenship Was against the 14th amendment which allowed blacks citizenship Radical Republicans had enough votes to override vetoes and did RADICAL REPUBLICAN PRINCIPLES Wanted to keep the Southern States legislatures out of Congress as long as possible MODERATE REPUBLICANS Preferred policies that stopped states from denying citizen rights Both moderates and radicals felt blacks should have the right to vote 5 AP U.S. HISTORY – 12TH EDITION - CHAPTER 22 THE ORDEAL OF RECONSTRUCTION MILITARY RECONSTRUCTION Divide the South into five military districts Each commanded by a Union General and policed by Union soldiers # Military Reconstruction, 1867 – Districts page 490 REPUBLICAN MODERATES Wanted to create a voting electorate [both black and white] that would vote the states back into the Union Also free the Southern states from having to protect black rights Moderates feared that if white Southerners were back in power that they would do away with the rights of former slaves Backed the 15th amendment that would guarantee the right for blacks to vote #Freedmen Voting, Richmond, Virginia, 1871 page 492 6