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Reconstruction Chapter 121

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1866 Mid-term Elections. Johnson campaigned against the radical republicans ... Election of 1872. Republicans re-nominated Grant ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconstruction Chapter 121


1
ReconstructionChapter 12-1
Charleston, SC, 1865
2
President Andrew Johnson
  • The war is over, Lincoln is dead, the country is
    still divided and over 600,000 soldiers are dead.
    Hundreds of thousands have life-long
    wounds
  • The country needs a strong leader
  • Instead, they got Johnson

3
Lincolns Reconstruction Plan
  • Before his assassination, Lincoln had moderate
    plans to admitting the seceded states back into
    the Union
  • Many radical Republicans in Congress thought his
    plan was too generous

4
Lincolns Reconstruction Plan
  • Lincolns plan called for
  • States were admitted as soon as 10 of the
    voters swore an oath of allegiance to America
  • Radical republicans wanted the South punished and
    not admitted until 50 pledged allegiance

5
Who were the Radicals?
  • Thaddeus Stevens
  • Charles Sumner
  • William Seward
  • They wanted to give blacks political power and
    positions while stripping all power away from
    planters

6
Wade-Davis Bill
  • In response to Lincolns 10 Plan, the radicals
    passed the Wade-Davis bill which
  • Wanted Congress to control reconstruction
  • 50 of the voters had to swear an oath of loyalty
    before they were re-admitted into the Union

7
Wade-Davis Bill
  • Lincoln allowed the bill to die with a pocket
    veto
  • The radicals were irate
  • Before any further conflict occurred, Lincoln was
    assassinated in April 1865

8
Johnsons Plan
  • The radicals thought Johnson would be easier to
    work with
  • He frequently spoke of his distain for Southern
    planters
  • As a southerner who stayed loyal to the Union,
    the radicals felt he would be harsher than
    Lincoln

9
Johnsons Plan
  • Johnsons plan was actually more moderate than
    Lincolns
  • He pardoned confederate officers
    and planters
  • He allowed generous terms for
    re-admittance

10
Johnsons Plan
  • Under President Johnson, soon the South looked
    very similar to the South of 1860
  • Blacks were tied to the cotton fields and had no
    freedoms
  • Whites, including former CSA officers, had all
    the power

11
Johnsons Plan
  • Some states didnt even ratify the 13th Amendment
    but were allowed to return to the Union
  • Johnson declared Reconstruction complete
  • The radical republicans disagreed

12
Freedmans Bureau
  • Started before the war ended, the organization
    provided food, housing, jobs, education, located
    family members, married couples and helped freed
    slaves adjust to freedom

13
Freedmans Bureau
  • In 1866 Congress voted to approve expanding and
    continuing the Freedmans Bureau
  • Surprisingly, Johnson vetoed the bill

14
Civil Rights Act, 1866
  • In 1866 Congress also voted to approve a Civil
    Rights Act to prevent discrimination and give
    blacks citizenship
  • Surprisingly, Johnson vetoed this bill too

15
Black Codes
  • Since the South seemed to have a friend in the
    White House, they began passing black codes
  • Exactly like slave codes, they prevented blacks
    from having any freedoms

16
Black Codes
  • Black codes made it illegal to loiter (hang out
    with no money)
  • Blacks were arrested and made to pay off their
    fines by working the fields just as
    they did in 1860

17
Moderate and Radical Republicans
  • Johnsons actions cause the more moderate
    republicans to join forces with the radicals to
    override Johnsons vetoes

18
14th Amendment
  • Congress drafted the 14th Amendment giving all
    people citizenship
  • It also provided equal protection, no state could
    deprive a person of life, liberty or property
    without due process

19
14th Amendment
  • It took away the privilege of holding elected
    office for former Confederate leaders unless 2/3s
    of Congress agreed
  • Johnson advised Southern states to reject the
    amendment and all did but TN

20
1866 Mid-term Elections
  • Johnson campaigned against the radical
    republicans
  • Grant, the war hero, campaigned for them
  • Voters turned away from Johnson and his platform
    and republicans increased their seats in Congress

21
Reconstruction Act, 1867
  • With the votes they needed in Congress,
    Reconstruction began in 1867
  • The new Reconstruction Act refused to recognize
    southern state governments (except TN)
  • Johnson vetoed the bill and it was overridden

22
(No Transcript)
23
Reconstruction Act, 1867
  • Voters, mostly blacks, voted for new
    Congressional representatives

24
Reconstruction Act, 1867
  • Fed up with Johnson, Congress looked for a way to
    impeach him
  • They passed the Tenure of Office Act which made
    it unlawful for him to fire any member of his
    cabinet
  • To challenge the law, Johnson fired his Sec. of
    War Edwin Stanton

25
Impeached Prez
  • It was Congress opinion that if they approved of
    the appointment, they should be the ones to
    approve his removal
  • Johnson faced 11 charges of impeachment
  • It was the OJ trial of 1867

26
Impeached Prez but not Removed
  • Johnson beat removal by 1 vote

27
1868 Election
  • Johnson was not nominated by his party
  • The Democrats nominated Horatio Seymour
  • The Republicans nominated war hero Grant

28
1868 Election
  • Grant won a decisive victory in
    the electoral college
  • He won an overwhelming number of African American
    votes
  • This makes the Republicans push for the 15th
    Amendment
  • Blacks will back republicans until 1932

29
15th Amendment
  • To prevent the South from ever taking the vote
    from blacks, they passed the 15th Amendment in
    1870
  • It did not prevent the South from enacting
    literacy tests and poll taxes

30
ReconstructionChapter 12-2
31
Republican Control
  • Once the radical republicans controlled Congress,
    African-Americans held many public offices in the
    South
  • Congress worked on improving the economic
    conditions of the devastated South

32
Public Works Programs
  • Road and rail construction
  • School system
  • Orphanages
  • Health care establishments
  • Very expensive projects which the north was
    hesitant to spend money to accomplish

33
Public Works Programs
  • Fraud and corruption
  • With the federal government funding, these
    projects were filled with graft, paybacks and use
    of illegal laborers

34
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
  • Many northerners came to the South to re-build
  • Others came to make money quick
  • They became known as carpetbaggers for the cheap
    bags they brought with them

35
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
  • Many southerners also took advantage of the poor
    southern economy
  • They bought land cheap when owners could not pay
    their taxes
  • They were called scalawags

36
15th Amendment
  • Republicans gave freedmen the right to vote.
  • They backed Grant and their votes assured his win
  • In some areas, they had up to a 90 turnout
    (today, we get about 30-40)

37
Freedmen
  • One of the first things that newly freed slaves
    did was find their family members
  • They also got legally married

38
Freedmen
  • Not restricted by slave codes, freedmen took
    advantage of their new freedoms by traveling
  • They left their former plantations to the cities
    to look for work

39
Freedmen
  • Freedmen flocked to schools
  • Classrooms were filled with adults learning how
    to read
  • Hampton Institute was opened for black students
  • Initially, most teachers were white women from
    the north

40
Freedmen
  • Black churches were always important to the black
    community
  • They now assumed an active role in politics,
    employment and financial support

41
Freedmen
  • During Reconstruction, a total of 16 black
    representatives were elected to Congress
  • Hiram Revels was elected to the seat once held by
    Jefferson Davis

42
Freedmen
  • The Republican Congress abolished all black codes
    but the black community segregated themselves to
    build their own churches, political organizations
    and leadership

43
Freedmen
  • Economically, blacks remained poor
  • Lacked money to buy land
  • Did not get the 40 acres and a mule like some
    heard they were entitled to

44
Freedmen
  • The Southern Homestead Act, 1866 set aside land
    for former slaves, but it was not suitable for
    farming
  • Planters still needed labor
  • Soon they would find a way to get it

45
Sharecropping
  • Former slaves had little choice but to sign labor
    contracts with the landowners, sometimes their
    former owners
  • Freedmen farmed for low wages and were forced to
    do as they were told

46
Sharecropping
  • During the growing season, the sharecroppers
    bought food, seed and equipment on credit
  • After the harvest, they gave a share of the crops
    to the landowner, paid back their loans and kept
    the profits

47
Sharecropping
  • In reality, after paying back the loans and high
    interest, there was nothing left over
  • When they didnt make enough to pay off their
    debts, they were indebted to the landowner and
    forced to work their land until the loans were
    paid

48
Tenant Farmers
  • Some had a little money to lease land
  • With their own tools and equipment it was hoped
    they could move up the economic ladder
  • Landowners made sure it never happened

49
Tenant Farmers
  • Freedmen who worked the fields, stayed in the
    fields
  • The price of cotton fluctuated so badly, farmers
    grew more to sell more
  • Which drove up the supply and drove down the
    prices

50
Tenant Farmers
  • Freedmen who worked the fields, stayed in the
    fields
  • The price of cotton fluctuated so badly, farmers
    grew more to sell more
  • Which drove up the supply and drove down the
    prices, so theyd plant more the next year

51
White Southerners
  • From 1866, whites lost economic and political
    power
  • The reacted violently

52
Reconstruction12-3
Thomas Nast Cartoon
53
Ku Klux Klan
  • Nathan Bedford Forrest and other Confederates
    formed the KKK in Pulaski, TN in 1868

54
Ku Klux Klan
  • Their goals were to frighten blacks away from
    voting, taking away any freedoms given by the
    Republicans and putting them
    back in pre-war conditions

55
Ku Klux Klan
  • The Klan killed freemen, burned homes and farms,
    killed supporters of black rights
  • They concealed their identities with hoods and
    robes

56
Enforcement Acts, 1870, 1871
  • Congress and Pres. Grant passed laws to stop the
    violence
  • None were effective and the USSC found one to be
    unconstitutional

57
Amnesty Act, 1872
  • Congress passed the Amnesty Act which returned
    the vote to most white men
  • They also allowed the
    Freedmans
    Bureau to expire

58
Amnesty Act, 1872
  • By the early 1870s, northerners were becoming
    tired of Reconstruction
  • It was expensive and they did not see the need to
    keep financing southern rebuilding and the
    betterment of freedmen

59
Panic of 1873
  • Poor management and over construction of
    railroads drove the country into a panic
  • This further removed Northern interest in the
    South reconstruction

60
Corruption in the Grant Administration
  • Grant was honest but naïve about others in power
  • His administration was plagued with corruption

61
Crédit Mobilier
  • A construction company was found to have taken
    profits from federal railroad construction
    projects
  • Grants VP, Schuyler Colfax, was involved
  • Grant had no knowledge of this

62
Election of 1872
  • Republicans re-nominated Grant
  • Democrats nominated NY Tribune editor, Horace
    Greeley
  • Grant won decisively and Greeley died a few weeks
    after the election

63
Election of 1872
64
Whiskey Ring Scandal
  • In 1875, Grant was caught in another corruption
    scheme
  • Revenue collectors and government officials took
    bribes from whiskey makers to avoid paying taxes
  • It cost the treasury millions of dollars

65
Scandals Continue
  • In 1876, Grants Sec. of War was caught accepting
    bribes
  • Grants Sec pf the Navy was caught taking bribes
  • Grants Sec of the Interior also was involved in
    some shady land dealings

66
Scandals Continue
  • Although Grant was never involved in any of the
    schemes and it is unlikely that he was even aware
    of them, he did not seek re-election in 1876.

67
Panic of 1873
  • Cities and states were eager to fund railroad
    construction
  • They loaned money to risky construction firms
  • Their bankruptcies caused a panic
  • Banks closed and railroads went broke

68
Panic of 1873
  • The economy floundered for the next 5 years with
    3 million people unemployed
  • Some wealthy entrepreneurs, including William
    Vanderbilt, began buying the railroads and will
    later create a monopoly

69
Currency Issues
  • Lincoln began using currency, greenbacks, during
    the Civil War
  • After the war, many wanted to call in the
    greenbacks and only allow currency backed by gold
  • This would mean less money in the economy

70
Economics 101
  • When less money is available
  • Only people with excellent credit get loans
  • Loan interest rates rise
  • Prices fall
  • Bankers and industrialists wanted this

71
Economics 101
  • When more money is available
  • Lenders are eager to loan money
  • Interest rates are low
  • Prices go up
  • Farmers wanted this so their crop prices would go
    up and it would be easier to pay off loans

72
Specie Resumption Act, 1875
  • The government decided to pull the greenbacks out
    of the economy
  • The economy was beginning to improve (after the
    Panic of 1873) so the issue died for a short time

73
Reconstruction Lets get it over already
  • By 1875, Reconstruction had been going on for 9
    years
  • People, north and south, were tired of it and
    wanted it to end
  • The USSC made decisions that took power from the
    14th and 15th Amendments

74
Slaughterhouse Cases, 1873
  • The USSC decided that most rights of citizens
    come from their state, not the country,
    therefore, the Court did not protect any denied
    state right

75
US v. Cruikshank, 1876
  • The USSC decided that the federal government did
    not have the right to punish whites who oppressed
    blacks

76
US V. Reese, 1876
  • The USSC decided that the 15th Amendment only
    gave the minimum requirements to allow blacks to
    vote, states could use other methods to deny
    suffrage
  • Each of these decisions would later be
    overturned, but in the mid 1870s, they were law

77
Northern Reaction to Reconstruction
  • Northerners were tired of the Negro question
  • Many radical republicans, Stevens and Sumner, are
    dead
  • Republicans started to back away from
    reconstruction and monitoring Southern actions

78
Election of 1876
  • Republicans nominated Hayes
  • Democrats nominated Tilden
  • Because of irregularities, there were questions
    about votes in3 southern states
  • Although never proven, it appeared that a deal
    was agreed upon

79
Compromise of 1877
  • Rutherford B. Hayes was given the presidency
  • He immediately began pulling troops from the South

80
Redeemers Take Control
  • Democrats, called Southern Redeemers, took over
    official positions throughout the South
  • Black codes were put in place,
    violence escalated,
    lynchings increased and southerners
    got home rule

81
Redeemers Take Control
  • The redeemers passed laws that wiped out almost
    every freedom given to freedman
  • Blacks were arrested for minor infractions and
    made to labor to pay off their fines

82
Was Reconstruction a Failure?
  • Historians still disagree over this question
  • Yes, blacks given too many freedoms to fast
  • No, many institutions established set the basis
    for later programs and slavery was over forever
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