Title: Standard 4'4 Effects of Reconstruction, 13th15th Amendments
1Standard 4.4- Effects of Reconstruction,
13th-15th Amendments
2Ten Percent Plan (1863)
- Proposed by
- President Abraham Lincoln
- Conditions for former Confederate states to
rejoin the Union - Ten percent of voters must swear loyalty to the
Union. - Must abolish slavery.
3Andrew Johnsons Plan (1865)
- Proposed by
- Andrew Johnson
- Conditions for former Confederate states to
rejoin Union - Majority of white men must swear loyalty.
- Must ratify Thirteenth Amendment.
- Former Confederate officials may vote and hold
office.
4Freedmen's Bureau
- Gave food and clothing to former slaves.
- Tried to find jobs for freedmen.
- Helped poor whites as well.
- Provided medical care for over 1 million people.
5Black Codes
- Poll Taxes required voters to pay a fee each
time they voted - Freedmen could rarely afford to vote.
- Literacy Tests required voters to read in order
to vote. - Freedmen had little education.
- Grandfather Clauses If voters father or
grandfather had been eligible to vote in 1867 the
voter did not have to take the literacy test. - This increased the number of eligible white
voters.
6Reconstruction Act (1867)
- Proposed by
- Radical Republicans in Congress
- Conditions for former Confederate states to
rejoin Union - Must disband state governments.
- Must write new constitutions.
- Must ratify the Fourteenth Amendment.
- African Americans must be allowed to vote.
- Johnson was impeached
7Thirteenth Amendment
Freed slaves in the United States
8Fourteenth Amendment
- Granted citizenship to all persons born in the
United States. This gave most African Americans
citizenship. - Guaranteed equal protection of the laws.
- Declared that no state could deprive any person
of life, liberty, or property without due process
of law.
9Fifteenth Amendment
Forbade any state to deny African Americans the
right to vote because of their race. 1870
10Political effects in South
- Freedmen were allowed to vote, so many African
Americans were in state legislatures. - Northerners came down as missionaries
entrepreneurs so whites called them carpetbaggers - Others were southern born scalawags who wanted to
cooperate and rebuild the South - Public education but segregated
- Depended on sharecropping in South instead of
slavery (economically depressed )
11Election of 1876
- Rutherford Hayes vs. Tilden (Democrat)
- Led to Compromise of 1877 and withdrawal of
troops from the SouthDemocratic congress got
things like building a railroad, improving
harbors and have a conservative Southerner in his
cabinet. In return they appointed Hayes a
Republican - African Americans were left to fend for
themselves. - Ended Reconstruction
12Standard 4.5- Progress made by African Americans,
then reversed by Reconstructions End
13Standard 4-5
- A. Economic Gain- very little economic gain for
blacks (sharecropping didnt work for them) - B. Political Gains
- After 15th amendment, blacks served in Congress
local legislature - Federal troops in South made it where blacks
could still vote (Klu Klux Klan other groups
tried to intimidate)
14Standard 4-5
- C. Social Gains of Blacks
- Reunited with families but stayed in South
- Formed churches
- Freedoms Bureau helped protect blacks and gave
education (Black Colleges founded- Booker T.
Washington Tuskegee Institute) - Southern states did away with carrying out
14th/15th amendment after Reconstruction. - Segregation through things like Plessy v.
Ferguson, Jim Crow Laws drove a wedge into the
movement of equality.
15Plessy v. Ferguson
The Supreme Courts decision ruled that
segregation was legal so long as the facilities
for blacks and whites were equal