Title: Bell Ringer
1Bell Ringer
Reconstruction
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Vocabulary Word Reconstruction
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3Reconstruction
- The Rebuilding of the Union After the Civil War
1863-1877
4The Emancipation Proclamation
- The first step of Reconstruction.
- Issued after the Battle of Antietam. (1862)
- Freed all slaves located in Confederate States.
- Those slaves were forever free.
- Slaves Freemen could join the military.
- Took effect on January 1st, 1863.
5What is Slavery?
- Slavery is enjoying the fruits of another mans
labor, without permission.
6How do you enjoy freedom?
- Give us land and then we can enjoy the fruits
of our labor. - Sherman began to set aside land in plots of 40
acres and gave out the worn down mules from the
military
7April 9, 1865
Appomattox Court House, Virginia
8- Blacks who have so heroically vindicated their
manhood on the battle-field, where, in assisting
to serve the life of the Republic, they have
demonstrated in blood their right to the Ballot.
- The restoration of the Rebel States to the
Union must rest upon the principle of Civil and
political equality of both races.
How would the South react to this speech?
9April 14th, 1865
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11"Our country owed all her troubles to him, and
God simply made me the instrument of his
punishment"
12Oh Captain!My Captain!
13Lesson Objectives
- What were the opposing views of Reconstruction in
the wake of the Civil War? - Who supported these competing views and why?
- Was Reconstruction a success? Why or why not?
14The War Is Over
15Virgil Caine is the name, and I served on the
Danville train
16'Til Stoneman's cavalry came and tore up the
tracks again.
17In the winter of '65, We were hungry, just barely
alive.
18By May the tenth, Richmond had fell, it's a time
I remember, oh so well,
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24Back with my wife in Tennessee, When one day she
called to me,
25"Virgil, quick, come see, there goes Robert E.
Lee!"
26Now I don't mind choppin' wood, and I don't care
if ma money's no good.Ya take what ya need and
ya leave the rest,But they should never have
taken the very best.
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32Like my father before me, Im a working man,
33Like my brother before me, who took a rebel stand.
34He was just eighteen, proud and brave, But a
Yankee laid him in his grave.
35The War Is Over?
- "The countryside looked for many miles like a
broad, black streak of ruin and desolation, the
fences all gone, lonesome smokestacks surrounded
by dark heaps of ashes and cinders. The fields
along the road wildly overgrown by weeds, and
here and there a sickly patch of cotton or corn
cultivated by Negro squatters." - Carl Schurz
36Questions to be Answered during Reconstruction
- How would the South rebuild its society and
economy? - What would be the place in society of the freed
blacks? - How would the southern states reenter the Union?
- Who would be in charge, the President or Congress?
37Conflicts Still Remain
38North hopes to continue economic progress
39Southern Aristocracy still needed cheap labor
supply
40Lincoln believed the southern states had never
left the Union because the Constitution did not
allow Secession
41- With Malice toward none, with charity for all,
with firmness in the right, as God gives us to
see the right, let us strive on to finish the
work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds. - Abraham Lincoln
- 2nd Inaugural Address
42Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction 1863
- Full presidential pardons granted to most
southerners who (1) took an oath of allegiance to
the Union and US Constitution and (2) accepted
the emancipation of slaves. - A state government could be reestablished as soon
as 10 of the voters in that state took the
loyalty oath
43This 10 Plan was seen by many northerners as too
lenient
The Wade-Davis Bill was a more harsh response
passed by a Radical Republican led Congress.
44With Lincolns untimely death, the conflict
between the Presidency and Congress over
Reconstruction erupted.
45The Wrong Man at the Wrong Time
- A white supremacist from Tennessee
- A Tailor by trade
- Self-educated man
- Became President after Lincolns Assassination
46Lick My Boots!
- Johnson changed plan from 10 to 51
- State Conventions must pass the 13th Amendment
abolishing slavery - Added that if a Southerner who owned property
worth 20,000 or more they were excluded and must
request a pardon personally before Andrew Johnson - Johnson hated this upper class of Southerners and
blamed them for starting the war
47Johnsons Plan
- Considered too lenient like Lincolns
- Clause allowed president to grant pardons, which
he did regularly to former southern statesmen
(Who else would run the South?)
48- Johnson was willing to admit states once the
portion that swore the loyalty oath had written a
constitution and established a new government - The South rushed to form new governments that
they would have a say in forming before the new
Congress returned
49The Souths Response Black Codes
- Many states passed laws restricting the rights of
freedmen. - Vagrancy laws forced former slaves to work for
low wages for the same people who used to own
slaves
50Radical Republicans
- Believed the South should be punished for
starting the war - Hoped to protect the rights of freed men
especially suffrage and free labor
51Race Riots Break out in South
- Increases great fear across North that
Reconstruction is not working and freedmen are
being exploited and attacked.
52Election of 1866Waving the Bloody Shirt
- Angered by President Johnsons policies and
pardons many Radical Republicans were elected to
Congress - Gave the Radicals enough power to override
Johnsons actions
53- Congress alone can do it. . . Congress must
create states and declare whether they are to be
represented. - Thaddeus Stevens
Charles Sumner
54Johnson Congress Clash
- Congress extended the Freedmens Bureau over
Johnsons Veto - Passed over Johnsons Veto, the Civil Rights Act
of 1866 designed to grant freedmen full legal
equality and undercut the Black Codes
55- Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act
- Stated that the President could not fire any
official approved by the Senate unless the Senate
approved the firing.
56Get Your Tickets!
57- Johnson fired Secretary of War Edwin Stanton
- Andrew Johnson was impeached by the House of
Representatives but missed by two votes in the
Senate to find him guilty
58Radicals Make it Official
- 13th Amendment Abolished Slavery in the United
States (1865) - 14th Amendment defined citizenship to include
freed blacks guarantees due process of law and
equal protection under law Ties representation
in the House to the proportion of male suffrage
in a states population (overrides 3/5 clause.
(1866) - 15th Amendment gave the right to vote to any
male, regardless of race (1870)
59Reconstruction Act of 1867
- Divided South in to 5 military districts and
placed them under military rule - Required states to ratify the 14th Amendment
- Guaranteed freedmen the right to vote in
conventions to write new state constitutions
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62Custodians of Freedom!
- Equality Now Written into the Constitution!
- The Federal government now became the protector
of Civil Rights - Aggrieved citizens would not appeal to the
Federal government when their rights may had
been violated - Enforcement Act issued to enforce new rights
(Secret Service expanded to oversee the
enforcement)
631865 Freedmens Bureau
- Established to educate newly freed slaves (Fisk,
Howard University) - Feed those suffering after the war
- Worked to help turn former slaves into wage
earners labor contracts
64Freed Blacks rise to Government Positions during
Radical Reconstruction
Hiram Revels was 1st Black Senator
- First Black members of Congress
65Realities and Responses to Reconstruction
- Carpetbaggers - Republicans from the North who
took advantage of the broken South and packed
their bags to gain politically and economically
in the South - Scalawags Term for rascals, Southerners who
quickly converted to Republicans
66One view of Reconstruction
67Changes in Southern Agriculture
- Debt peonage Planters signed former slaves to
labor contracts in which planters gave money to
laborers in exchange for work. Kept the freedman
in constant debt. - Sharecropping Farmers grew a crop on land owned
by someone else in return for a percentage of the
crop - Tenant Farmers Farmers who paid rent to use of
land
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69- This is an institution of Chivalry, Humanity,
Mercy and Patriotism, embodying in its genius and
its principles all that is chivalric in conduct,
noble in sentiment, generous in manhood and
patriotic in purpose. Our goals are to protect
the weak, innocent and defenseless, to protect
and defend the constitution of the United
States.
- We hold this to be a government of white
people, made and to be perpetuated for the
exclusive benefit of the white race, and that
people of African descent cannot be considered
citizens of the United States, and that there
can, in no event, nor under any circumstances, be
any equality between white and other races.
70Matching
- We hold this to be a government of white
people, made and to be perpetuated for the
exclusive benefit of the white race, and that
people of African descent cannot be considered
citizens of the United States, and that there
can, in no event, nor under any circumstances, be
any equality between white and other races.
- This is an institution of Chivalry, Humanity,
Mercy and Patriotism, embodying in its genius and
its principles all that is chivalric in conduct,
noble in sentiment, generous in manhood and
patriotic in purpose. Our goals are to protect
the weak, innocent and defenseless, to protect
and defend the constitution of the United
States.
71The Whites Social Club
- Ku Klux Klan group that formed primarily in the
South in response to Congress pro-black
legislation that promised to defend the social
and political superiority of whites against the
aggressions of an inferior race.
72The Klan
- Led by former Confederate General Nathan Bedford
Forrest - Used violence and intimidation to prevent blacks
from voting, holding office, and exercising their
civil, political, and economic rights. - President Grant sent troops to the South to stop
the domestic violence of the KKK - By 1876, white supremacists gain control over
Southern states.
73Reconstruction ends with a Compromise
- Election of 1876 Hayes versus Tilden
- Election results were in dispute
- Compromise Rutherford B. Hayes would become
president if he promised to remove federal troops
from southern states.
74 75The Fourteenth Amendment restrains only state
action. And the fifth section of the Amendment
empowers Congress only to enforce the prohibition
on state action. The amendment did not authorize
national legislation on subjects which are within
the domain of the state. Private acts of racial
discrimination were simply private wrongs that
the national government was powerless to correct.
76Which of the Following was an action supported by
the radical Republicans during Reconstruction?
- Sharecropping by Freedmen
- The Ku Klux Klan
- Freedmans Bureau
- Black Codes
77- It is clear that the Reconstruction period was
going to be painful. President warned of this,
but I dont think that anyone understood what was
coming. This after-war era was at the least, poor
communication, and at the most, a war in itself.
Americas foundation was set by compromise to
make everyone content. The South needed slaves
for their economy, but the North had thought of
slavery as wrong long before the war. Once the
North didnt have their main source for income,
they needed help, and they were too angry with
the North to accept it. - Carpet baggers may have been a controversial
idea, but I believe they were right to do what
they did. They moved south, and helped start the
tenet farming and sharecropping systems. This put
more cash into the souths pockets, and
re-boosted their agricultural production. I
believe that if the south had accepted these
people, there would be less of a debate on
weather this time was a success or failure. - But rather than accepting what they had for share
croppers and tenet farmers, they set up the
Black Codes. They made unpaid work punishment
for blacks unlawfulness, which is practically
lawful slavery, and is a violation of the 14th
amendment. The Ku Klux Klan was also started and
this caused many Hate Crimes. Yes it was a
failure, but it was more successful. Look at us
today we have no slaves, we are very racially
tolerant, and we are going to accept a black
president for the first time ever. The hell that
the radical republicans went through to make sure
that the problem was being taken care of at the
time made it so we didnt have another civil war
20 years later because of something they put
off.