Title: UNIT: CLASH OF BELIEFS, RECONSTRUCTION
1UNIT CLASH OF BELIEFS,RECONSTRUCTION
- SSUSH10 The student will identify legal,
political, and social dimensions of - Reconstruction.
- a. Compare and contrast Presidential
Reconstruction with Radical Republican
Reconstruction. - b. Explain efforts to redistribute land in the
South among the former slaves and provide
advanced education (e.g., Morehouse College) and
describe the role of the Freedmens Bureau. - c. Describe the significance of the 13th, 14th,
and 15th amendments. - d. Explain Black Codes, the Ku Klux Klan, and
other forms of resistance to racial equality
during Reconstruction. - e. Explain the impeachment of Andrew Johnson in
relationship to Reconstruction - f. Analyze how the presidential election of 1876
and the subsequent compromise of 1877 marked the
end of Reconstruction.
2RECONSTRUCTION
- The unit concludes with a focus on the beliefs
and ideals of political reconstruction of the
South and the struggles of newly freed
African-Americans.
3RECONSTRUCTION
- Reconstruction is the era in the U.S. history
from 1865 to 1877, when the U.S. focused on
abolishing slavery, destroying all traces of the
Confederacy, establishing the rights of Freedmen,
the name used for freed slaves, and through three
new constitutional amendments, strengthening the
role of the federal governments and its courts.
4RECONSTRUCTION
- TYPES OF RECONSTRUCTION
- 1. PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION
- 2. RADICAL REPUBLICAN RECONSTRUCTION
5RECONSTRUCTION
6OPPOSITION TO RECONSTRUCTION
7PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION
- 1. PLAN OF PRES. A. LINCOLN AND PRES. ANDREW
JOHNSON (DISCUSSED IN 2ND INAUGURAL ADDRESS) - 2. URGED NO REVENGE ON THE S
- 3. ADMIT S BACK INTO UNION ASAP
- 4. REPUBLICANS IN CONGRESS WERE OUTRAGED, THOUGH,
THAT NEW STATE GOVERNMENTS IN S WERE PASSING LAWS
ALLOWING DISCRIMINATION AGAINST BLACKS, THE NEWLY
FREED SLAVES.
8RADICAL REPUBLICAN RECONSTRUCTION
- 1. OPPOSED TO PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION OF
PRES. JOHNSON - 2. CONGRESS FORCED STATES IN S. TO REAPPLY FOR
ADMISSION TO UNION AND MAKE PROGRESS FOR RIGHTS
OF BLACKS. - 3. RESULT CREATION OF GOVTS WITH BLACKS
INVOLVED - 4. MAJOR LEGISLATION WHICH BECAME LAWS IN USC TO
PROTECT RIGHTS OF BLACKS - 1) CIVIL WAR AMENDMENTS TO THE USC
9CIVIL WAR AMENDMENTS
- 1. AMENDMENT 13 ABOLISHED SLAVERY
- 2. AMENDMENT 14 CITIZENSHIP FOR ALL PERSONS
BORN IN USA (INCLUDING BLACKS) AND GUARANTEE OF
RIGHT OF DUE PROCESS - 3. AMENDMENT 15 SUFFRAGE FOR ALL MALES AGE 21
AND OLDER
10GAINS OF BLACK AMERICANS DURING RECONSTRUCTION
- 1. ESTABLISHED FREE SCHOOLS
- 2. STARTED NEWSPAPERS
- 3. SERVED IN PUBLIC OFFICE
- 4. ESTABLISHED NEW COLLEGES
- 1) MOREHOUSE, ATLANTA, 1867, FOR MINISTRY AND
EDUCATION
11MOREHOUSE COLLEGE
- Morehouse College is a private, all-male,
historically black college located in Atlanta,
Georgia. It is one of four remaining traditional
mens colleges in the United States. - Located on a 61 acre (247,000 m²) campus, the
college has an enrollment of 3,000 students. The
student-faculty ratio of the campus is 161 and
100 of the school's tenure-track faculty hold
terminal degrees. Along with Clark Atlanta
University, Interdenominational Theological
Center, Morehouse School of Medicine and nearby
women's college Spelman College, Morehouse is
part of the Atlanta University Center.
- WILLIAM JEFFERSON WHITE
- RICHARD C. COULTER
- On May 16, 2008, Joshua Packwood became the first
white valedictorian to graduate in the school's
141-year history.
12GAINS, CONTINUED
- 5. CONGRESS ESTABLISHED THE FREEDMENS BUREAU TO
HELP BLACKS MAKE TRANSITION TO FREEDOM. - 6. BLACKS HAD FEW SKILLS. MOST CONTINUED TO
FARM BY SHARECROPPING OR TENANT FARMING.
13FARMING
- 1) Sharecropping is a system of agriculture or
agricultural production in which a landowner
allows a tenant to use the land in return for a
share of the crop produced on the land - 2) Tenant farming is farming by one who resides
on and farms land owned by a landlord.
14THE MAJOR EVENT OF RECONSTRUCTION
- IMPEACHMENT OF PRES. ANDREW JOHNSON
- 1. IMPEACHMENT-FORMAL CHARGE OF MISCONDUCT IN
OFFICE (NOT REMOVAL FROM OFFICE) - 2. Johnson was impeached for the charge of High
Crimes and Misdemeanors on February 24, 1868, of
which one of the articles of impeachment was
violating the Tenure of Office Act. (REMOVED A
CABINET OFFICIAL WITHOUT CONGRESSIONAL APPROVAL) - 3. RADICAL REPUBLICANS IMPEACHED JOHNSON BECAUSE
HE IGNORED LAWS THEY HAD PASSED TO LIMIT
PRESIDENTS POWER. - 4. THE LAWS HAD BEEN PASSED TO STOP JOHNSON FROM
LIMITING THE RADICALS HOSTILE TREATMENT OF
SOUTHERN STATES.
15IMPEACHMENT TRIAL IN SENATE OF PRESIDENT ANDREW
JOHNSON
16- The SituationA Harper's Weekly cartoon gives a
humorous breakdown of "the situation". Secretary
of War Edwin Stanton aims a cannon labeled
"Congress" on the side at President Andrew
Johnson and Lorenzo Thomas to show how Stanton
was using congress to defeat the president and
his unsuccessful replacement. He also holds a
rammer marked "Tenure of Office Bill" and cannon
balls on the floor are marked "Justice". Ulysses
S. Grant and an unidentified man stand to
Stanton's left.
17- Andrew Johnson (December 29, 1808 July 31,
1875) was the 17th President of the United States
(186569), succeeding to the Presidency upon the
assassination of Abraham Lincoln. He was the
first U.S. President to be impeached.
18RECONSTRUCTIONRESISTANCE TO RACIAL EQUALITY
- 1. FORMER SLAVE STATES IN S ENACTED BLACK CODES.
- 2. BLACK CODES RESTRICTED FREED BLACKSDEPRIVED
BLACKS OF RIGHTS, ESPECIALLY VOTING (SUFFRAGE.) - 3. FORMATION OF KKK, KU KLUX, KLAN
- 4. CARPETBAGGERS-NORTHERNERS WHO HELPED BLACKS
- 5. SCALAWAGS-SOUTHERNERS WHO HELPED BLACKS AND
CARPETBAGGERS
19(No Transcript)
20FINAL THOUGHTS, RECONSTRUCTION
- 1. MOST WHITE, SOUTHERNERS RESISTED
RECONSTRUCTION. - 2. RECONSTRUCTION ENDED WHEN FEDERAL TROOPS WERE
WITHDRAWN FROM S IN 1877. - 3. SOUTHERN WHITES REGAINED CONTROL OF STATE
GOVTS. - 4. UNLAWFUL SEGREGATION BEGAN.
21THE END OF RECONSTRUCTION
- THE ELECTION OF 1876
- THE COMPROMISE OF 1877
22ELECTION OF 1876
- The United States presidential election of 1876
was one of the most disputed presidential
elections in American history. Samuel J. Tilden
of New York outpolled Ohio's Rutherford B. Hayes
in the popular vote, and had 184 electoral votes
to Hayes' 165, with 20 votes uncounted. These 20
electoral votes were in dispute in three states
(Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina), each
party reported its candidate had won the state,
while in Oregon one elector was declared illegal
(as an "elected or appointed official") and
replaced. The 20 disputed electoral votes were
ultimately awarded to Hayes after a bitter legal
and political battle, giving him the victory.
23RUTHERFORD HAYES AND SAMUEL TILDEN, ELECION, 1876
24COMPROMISE OF 1877
- Many historians believe that an informal deal was
struck to resolve the dispute the Compromise of
1877. In return for Democrat acquiescence in
Hayes' election, the Republicans agreed to
withdraw federal troops from the South, ending
Reconstruction. The Compromise effectively ceded
power in the Southern states to the white
supremacist "Redeemers" (who were Democrats). The
Redeemers subsequently disfranchised
African-Americans in the South and barred them
from holding any political offices.
25- The Compromise of 1877 was an informal, unwritten
deal that settled the disputed 1876 U.S.
Presidential election. Through it, Republican
Rutherford B. Hayes was awarded the White House
over Democrat Samuel J. Tilden on the
understanding that Hayes would remove the federal
troops that were propping up Republican state
governments in South Carolina, Florida and
Louisiana. Consequently, the incumbent President,
Republican Ulysses Grant, removed the soldiers
from Florida before Hayes as his successor
removed the remaining troops in South Carolina
and Louisiana. As soon as the troops left, many
Republicans also left (or became Democrats) and
the "Redeemer" Democrats took control.