Title: The Crises of Reconstruction
1Chapter 16
- The Crises of Reconstruction
- 1865-1877
2Introduction
- The ending of the Civil War and the
Reconstruction period that followed constituted a
crucial turning point in American history - Between 1865 and 1877
- Vital problems had to be solved
- How and under what conditions the South should be
readmitted to the Union - What the rights and status of the 3.5 million
freedmen should be
3Introduction (cont.)
- 1.) How did the Radical Republicans gain control
over reconstructing the South, and what was the
impact of their program on the ex-Confederates,
other white southerners, and black southerners? - 2.) How did freed blacks remake their lives after
emancipation? - 3.) What political and economic developments
occurred in the North during the Reconstruction
Era?
4Introduction (cont.)
- 4.) What brought about the end of Reconstruction?
5Reconstruction Politics, 1865-1868
- Lincolns Plan
- Differences between President Lincoln and
Congress on reconstruction of the Confederate
states began as early as 1863 - Would allow the formation of a new state govt.
when as few as 10 of the states voters took an
oath of loyalty to the Union - Also had to recognize the end of slavery
- This plan said nothing about votes for freedmen
- Lincoln hoped to win over southern Unionists and
draw them into the Rep. Party
6Lincolns Plan (cont.)
- Wade-Davis Bill
- Passed by Congress
- Republicans who disagreed with Lincolns plan
- Required at least 50 of the voters take an oath
of allegiance - It excluded from participation in govt. all those
who had cooperated with the Confederacy - Lincoln pocket-vetoed the bill
- At the time of his death, he and Congress were at
an impasse
7Pres. Reconstruction Under Johnson
- President Andrew Johnson announced his
Reconstruction Plan in May 1865 - Unconcerned about the blacks but wished to
promote the interests of the poorer whites in the
South - Johnson required whites to take an oath of
allegiance to the Union - After which they could set up new state govts.
- These had to proclaim secession illegal,
repudiate Confederate debts, and ratify the 13th
Amendment (abolished slavery)
8Pres. Reconstruction Under Johnson (cont.)
- Whites who had held high office under the
Confederacy and all those with taxable property
of 20,000 or more could NOT vote or hold office - They had to apply for and receive a special
pardon from the Pres. - During the summer of 1865
- Johnson undermined his own policy of excluding
planters from leadership by handing out pardons
to them wholesale
9Pres. Reconstruction Under Johnson (cont.)
- The new govts. created under Johnsons plan were
soon dominated by former Confederate leaders and
large landowners - Some of the Johnson govts. refused to ratify the
13th Amend. - And all showed their intention of making black
freedom only nominal by enacting black codes
10Pres. Reconstruction Under Johnson (cont.)
- Horrified by such evidence of continued southern
defiance in Dec. 1865 - Republican-dominated Congress refused to
recognize these govts. or to seat the men they
sent to the House and the Senate
11Congress vs. Johnson
- Radical Republicans were in a minority in 1866
- They wished to give black men the vote
- Transform the South into a biracial democracy
- Moderate Republicans were in the majority
- Wanted to get rid of the black codes
- And protect the basic civil rights of blacks
12Congress vs. Johnson (cont.)
- The moderates attempted to accomplish these
limited goals by continuing the Freedmens Bureau
and passing the Civil Rights Act of 1866 - Johnson vetoed both of these measures
- This drove the moderates into an alliance with
the Radicals - Together they overrode his vetoes
- This alliance would create the 14th Amendment
1314th Amendment, 1866
- For the 1st time, the federal govt. defined
citizenship and intervened to protect person from
state govts. - It stated that all persons born in the U.S.A. or
naturalized were citizens - No state could deny any persons rights without
due process of law or deny equal protection of
the law
1414th Amendment, 1866 (cont.)
- States that refused black men the vote could have
their representation in Congress reduced - Former Confederate officials were excluded from
voting and office-holding until pardoned by 2/3s
vote of Congress
1514th Amendment, 1866 (cont.)
- The southern states (except for TN), refused to
ratify the amendment - Pres. Johnson denounced it
- In the Congressional elections of 1866, the
Republicans won huge majorities - This gave them a mandate to force ratification of
the 14th Amendment - Also it allowed to proceed with congressional
Reconstruction of the South - 14th Amendment
16Congressional Reconstruction, 1866-1868
- Congress enacted its Reconstruction program over
Johnsons vetoes - The earlier Johnson govts., black codes, and all
other laws the southern states had passed were
invalidated - TN had been readmitted
- All other former Confederate states were divided
into districts under the temporary rule of the
military
17Congressional Reconstruction, 1866-1868 (cont.)
- Each state was required to write a new
constitution enfranchising black men - And they had to ratify the 14th Amendment
- When these things were done, Congress could
readmit the state to the Union
18Congressional Reconstruction, 1866-1868 (cont.)
- Congressional Reconstruction was more radical
than Lincolns or Johnsons - It enfranchised blacks and temporarily
disfranchised many whites - It did not go as far as the Radicals wanted
- It failed to confiscate southern land and
redistribute it to blacks and poor whites
19Congressional Reconstruction, 1866-1868 (cont.)
- Johnson dragged his feet in enforcing
congressional Reconstruction
20The Impeachment Crisis, 1867-1868
- Tenure of Office Act
- Passed by Congress
- March 1867
- Aimed at reducing the presidents power
- Tenure of Office Act
- Johnson violated it by firing Sec. of War Edwin
Stanton - Republicans in Congress began impeachment
proceedings
21The Impeachment Crisis, 1867-1868 (cont.)
- Some Republicans wavered
- Feared that removal of Johnson would upset the
constitutional balance of power - The vote to convict and remove President Johnson
fell 1 vote short of the necessary 2/3s of the
Senate - Impeachment Trial
22The 15th Amendment and the Question Of Woman
Suffrage
- Congress passed a final amend. To complete its
Reconstruction program - 15th Amendment stated that the right to vote
could not be denied because of race, color, or
previous condition of servitude - 15th Amendment
23(No Transcript)
24The 15th Amendment and the Question Of Woman
Suffrage (cont.)
- The Republicans hoped with this amendment to
- protect southern blacks
- extend suffrage to northern blacks
- gain many new voters for their party
- When Congress refused to include woman suffrage,
some feminists denounced the amendment and its
Republicans sponsors
25The 15th Amendment and the Question Of Woman
Suffrage (cont.)
- The 3 new amendments
- Ending slavery
- Guaranteeing the rights of citizens
- Enfranchising black men
- By 1870
- these new amendments were a part of the
Constitution - Congress had readmitted all the former
Confederate states - Thereafter congressional efforts at
Reconstruction weakened
26Reconstruction Governments
- The Reconstruction laws of 1867-1868 created a
new electorate in the South by enfranchising
blacks - Also they temporarily disfranchised 10-15 of the
whites - This new electorate put in power Republican
govts. what were made up of a coalition of
carpetbaggers, scalawags, and blacks
27Reconstruction Governments (cont.)
- Carpetbaggersnortherners who had come south for
a variety of reasons - Scalawagscooperating southern whites
28Republican Rule
- The Republican Reconstruction govts. democratized
southern politics by - abolishing property and racial qualifications for
voting and office-holding - redistricting state legislatures
- making formerly appointive offices elective
- They undertook extensive public works, offered
increased public services, and established the
Souths first public schools
29Republican Rule (cont.)
- All of this cost moneytaxes rose
- Southern landowners bitterly resented the
increased taxes - accused the state govts. of corruption and waste
- Some of their charges were true
- But many were exaggerated
- In no state was the land of ex-Confederate
planters confiscated and redistributed to
freedmen
30Counterattacks
- White southern Democrats refused to accept black
voting and office-holding - Launched a counterattack to drive Republican
govts. from power - White vigilante groups began a campaign of
violence and intimidation against blacks,
Freedmens Bureau officials, and white
Republicans
31Counterattacks (cont.)
- Congress investigated this reign of terror
- Congress attempted to suppress it with the
Enforcement Acts - But only a large military presence in the South
could have protected black rights and preserve
the black electorate
32Counterattacks (cont.)
- By the 1870s, Congress and President Grant were
no longer willing to use military force to remake
the South
33The Impact of Emancipation
- Confronting Freedom
- Freedmen left the plantations where they had been
enslaved - Usually lacked property, tools, capital, and
literacy - Often searched for family members from whom they
had been separated - Once reunited, many took the 1st opportunity to
legalize their marriages - Raise their children and live as an independent
family
34African-American Institutions
- The desire to be free of white control led blacks
to establish their own institutions - Most important were the black churches
- Played major religious, social, and political
roles - Many black schools were started with the help of
the Freedmens Bureau and northern
philanthropists - Howard, Fisk, Grambling, Southern
35African-American Institutions (cont.)
- Segregation of all facilities in the South became
a way of life - Charles Sumners Civil Rights Act of 1875
- It promised that all persons, regardless of race,
color, or previous condition, was entitled to
full and equal employment of accommodation in
"inns, public conveyances on land or water,
theaters, and other places of public amusement." - In 1883 the Supreme Court declared it
unconstitutional - Congress did not have the power to regulate the
conduct and transactions of individuals
36Land, Labor, and Sharecropping
- Above all, freedmen wanted to become landowning,
independent farmers - Few did because the Republicans believed that
property rights were too sacred to be violated by
confiscation and redistribution of the white
planters lands - Also, blacks did not have the capital to buy land
and agricultural tools
37Land, Labor, and Sharecropping (cont.)
- Landless laborers and landholding planters
developed sharecropping - A tenant farmer who farms land for the owner and
is paid a share of the value of the yielded crop - Many white small farmers also lost their land and
became sharecropping tenants - By 1880, 80 of the land in the cotton states was
worked by landless tenants
38Toward a Crop-Lien Economy
- Rural merchants often sold supplies to
sharecroppers on credit - A lien on the tenants share of the crop as
collateral - Sharecroppers fell deeper and deeper into debt
- Interest rates were exorbitant, cotton prices
low, and merchants often dishonest
39Toward a Crop-Lien Economy (cont.)
- Southern law prohibited their leaving the land
until they had fully repaid their debt - Sharecroppers were locked into poverty and
indebtedness
40New Concerns in the North, 1868-1876
- Grantism
- Ulysses S. Grant won the presidency in 1868
- Republican
- Popular war hero
41Grantism (cont.)
- His administration was marred by rampant
corruption - Many state and local govts. of the time also had
corruption - In 1872, some Republicans broke from Grant and
formed the Liberal Republican Party - Disgusted with the scandals
42The Liberals Revolt
- In 1872, the Liberal Republicans nominated Horace
Greely for president - The Democrats endorsed him as well
- The regular Republicans renominated Grant
- Grant won the election
- The split in the Republican ranks seriously
weakened Republican efforts to remake the South
43The Panic of 1873
- During Grants 2nd term, the nation suffered a
financial panic and a severe economic depression - business failures
- mass unemployment
- heightened labor-management conflict
- disputes over the countrys currency system
- All these issues further divided Republican
attention from Reconstruction
44Reconstruction and the Constitution
- The Supreme Court in the last quarter of the
1800s also undermined Republican Reconstruction - In a series of decisions, the Supreme Court
interpreted the 14th and 15th Amendments in a way
that made them all but useless for protecting
black citizens - It declared the Civil Rights and Enforcement Acts
unconstitutional and upheld state segregation
laws
45Republicans in Retreat
- By the 1870s, the Republicans were abandoning
their Reconstruction policy - Most of them were more interested in economic
growth than in protecting black rights - The Radicals who were committed to biracial
democracy in the South were dead or had been
defeated in elections
46Republicans in Retreat (cont.)
- Many northerners wanted to normalize relations
with the white South - They shared the racial belief that blacks were
inferior to whites, and the federal govt. could
not force equality
47Reconstruction Abandoned, 1876-1877
- Redeeming the South
- After 1872, congressional pardons restored voting
and office-holding rights to all ex-Confederates - The Democratic Party attempted to redeem the
South from Republican rule - These men pardoned and the Souths rising class
of business entrepreneurs
48Redeeming the South (cont.)
- By 1876, the Democrats had regained control of
all the southern states but SC, FL, and LA - Used economic pressure, intimidation, and
violence - Once in power the Democrats
- Cut taxes and public works and services
- passed laws favoring landlords over tenants
49Redeeming the South (cont.)
- Some blacks responded to the deteriorating
situation by migrating from the South - Most were trapped where they were
- Debt and poverty
50The Election of 1876
- RepublicansRutherford Hayes
- DemocratsSamuel Tilden
- Tilden won the popular vote
- But because of fraud and intimidation at the
polls, the electoral votes in 4 states were
disputed
51The Election of 1876 (cont.)
- A special congressional electoral commission
awarded all the disputed votes to Hayes - Commission was stacked in favor of the
Republicans - The Democrats refused to accept the finding until
a compromise deal was worked out by Southern
Democrats and Republican supporters of Hayes
52The Election of 1876 (cont.)
- In exchange for southern acceptance of Hayes as
president, the Republicans promised - 1.) to let Democrats take over the last
Republican Reconstruction govts. in LA and SC - 2.) to remove the remaining troops from the South
- 3.) to give more federal patronage to southern
Democrats - 4.) to provide federal aid for building railroads
and for other internal improvements in the South
53The Election of 1876 (cont.)
- This so-called Compromise of 1877 struck the
final blow to Radical Reconstruction - Also it ended all federal protection for the
freedmen - Compromise of 1877--summary and map
54Conclusion
- By the end of the Reconstruction era the
Republicans had firm support in the Northeast and
Midwest - The Democrats were solidly entrenched in the
South - Would remain so for nearly a century
55Conclusion (cont.)
- Many historians today look back on Reconstruction
as a democratic experiment that failed - Partly because Congress did not redistribute land
to freedmen - without any property freedmen were too
economically vulnerable to hold on to their
political rights
56Conclusion (cont.)
- Also, it failed because the Republicans were
unwilling to continue using military force to
protect blacks and remake southern society - Reconstruction did leave as a lasting legacy of
the 14th and 15th Amendments
57Conclusion (cont.)
- During the brief Reconstruction Era, southern
blacks - reunited their families
- created their own institutions
- for the first time participated in govt.