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CHAPTER 17 RECONSTRUCTION

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Title: CHAPTER 17 RECONSTRUCTION


1
CHAPTER 17 RECONSTRUCTION
2
RECONSTRUCTION
  • Reconstruction the process of readmitting the
    former Confederate states to the Union
  • 1865-1877
  • Lincolns main vision for the process was to
    reunite the nation as quickly and painlessly as
    possible

3
FREEDMENS BUREAU
  • Organization established by Congress to aid poor
    southerners
  • Gave relief to freed African-Americans
  • Established more schools and increased efforts to
    educate freed slaves

4
TEN PERCENT PLAN
  • Lincolns plan
  • Offered southerners amnesty, or official pardon
    (forgiveness), for all illegal acts supporting
    the rebellion
  • Southerners had to swear an oath of loyalty to
    the U.S. and agree that slavery was illegal
  • Many Republicans did not agree because they felt
    it would take more to restore the Union than a
    loyalty oath
  • (Do not copy) if only ten percent of voters in
    a state made these pledges, they could be
    readmitted into the Union

5
WADE-DAVIS BILL
  • This bill required that the majority of southern
    males take an oath of loyalty
  • Also required States to ban slavery forever

6
THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT
  • This amendment to the Constitution made slavery
    illegal throughout the U.S.
  • Ratified on December 18th, 1865

7
LINCOLNS ASSASSINATION
  • April 14th, 1865
  • Lincoln was shot and killed at Fords Theater in
    Washington, D.C. while attending a play with his
    life
  • His assassin was John Wilkes Booth who was a
    southerner who opposed Lincolns policies
  • VP Andrew Johnson was sworn into office quickly

8
PRESIDENT ANDREW JOHNSON
  • 17th President Democrat
  • He was now in charge of Reconstruction
  • Wanted to grant wealthy southerners and former
    Confederate leaders amnesty through presidential
    pardons
  • His administration set up new southern
    governments by allowing elections of state and
    federal representatives
  • Congress, however, still refused to readmit
    southern states be cause the representatives of
    the new governments had been Confederate leaders
    (nation was still divided)

9
CHANGES IN SOUTHERN LIFE
  • Social structure of the South changed because
    African-Americans began to demand the same
    economic and political rights as whites
  • Life at southern mills was difficult because
    employees were overworked and suffered from
    asthma and brown-lung disease
  • Many blacks were elected as representatives to
    state legislatures in the South

10
BLACK CODES
  • Southern states passed these laws to limit the
    freedom and civil rights of African-Americans
  • Southerners felt the codes were justified because
    the government was intended for white men only
  • Codes required that blacks sign work contracts to
    replace the labor force that was lost after the
    ending of slavery
  • Blacks were not allowed to own guns/firearms

11
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1866
  • Johnson determined that the Freedmens Bureau was
    unconstitutional
  • Republicans responded by passing this act which
    provided African-Americans with the same legal
    rights as whites

12
RADICAL REPUBLICANS
  • They wanted the federal government to force
    change in the South
  • They supported suffrage (the right to vote) for
    African-American men
  • Thaddeus Stevens, a Pennsylvania Congressman, was
    the leader

13
FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT
  • All people born or naturalized within the U.S.,
    except Native Americans, were citizens
  • Citizens were guaranteed equal protection of the
    laws
  • Republicans proposed this because they wanted to
    protect the Civil Rights Act from being
    overturned by the South

14
RECONSTRUCTION ACTS
  • Passed by Congress in March 1867
  • Divided the South into five military districts
    controlled by a military commander

15
JOHNSONS IMPEACHMENT
  • Impeachment process used by a legislative body
    to bring charges of wrongdoing against a public
    official
  • Congress passed a law that prevented the
    president from removing a cabinet official
    without Senate approval because they knew Johnson
    did not support their Reconstruction policies
  • House of Representatives voted to impeach Johnson
    in 1868 because he fired a cabinet official
    without Senate approval he wasnt convicted

16
ELECTION OF 1868
  • Ulysses S. Grant was voted the 18th president
  • He was a Republican
  • He appealed to many northern voters because he
    was a war hero and his party was the party of
    Lincoln
  • African-American votes helped him achieve victory

17
FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT
  • 1869 - Gave African-American men the right to
    vote
  • Republicans believed this amendment would help
    their Reconstruction plan because blacks would
    support the plan as well
  • Women criticized the amendment because it did not
    give them the right to vote

18
CARPETBAGGERS
  • White southerners used this term as an insult
    towards northern-born Republicans who held
    political offices in the South
  • (Do not copy) the rumor is that
    carpetbaggers rushed to the South carrying all
    their possessions in bags made from carpeting so
    they could profit off of Reconstruction

19
HIRAM REVELS
  • First African-American Senator
  • He was elected in 1870
  • Took over the seat previously held by Jefferson
    Davis in Mississippi

20
KU KLUX KLAN
  • Began in 1866
  • Secret society of white southerners who opposed
    black suffrage
  • They used violence and terror against
    African-Americans in some cases they murdered
    blacks
  • They gained much power in the South because local
    governments did little to stop their violence
  • Their actions inspired Congress to make it
    illegal to interfere with elections or deny
    citizens equal protection

21
END OF RECONSTRUCTION
  • In 1872, low-ranking, former Confederate officers
    were permitted to hold public office
  • Republican Party also began losing power in the
    North due to scandals in Ulysses S. Grants
    administration
  • Panic of 1873 severe economic downturn made
    northerners less concerned with southern racism
    and more considered with their financial
    well-being

22
COMPROMISE OF 1877
  • Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) was elected the
    19th president in 1876 after a dispute over
    electoral votes
  • Compromise Democrats agreed to accept Hayess
    victory if all federal troops were removed from
    the south

23
REDEEMERS
  • They were Democrats who regained control of state
    governments in the South
  • They established laws that successfully
    discriminated against African-Americans

24
JIM CROW LAWS
  • Segregation forced separation of whites and
    blacks in public places
  • Jim Crow laws enforced segregation
  • Poll tax a special tax that people had to pay
    so they could vote and many blacks could not
    afford it
  • Grandfather clause men whose fathers and
    grandfathers who could vote before 1867 did not
    have to pay the tax or take a literacy test
    every white man could escape voting restrictions

25
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26
SHARECROPPING SYSTEM
  • Limited opportunities for blacks to own farms and
    property
  • Most sharecroppers lived in a cycle of debt buy
    goods on credit and then fail to make much money
    selling their crops

27
PLESSY V. FERGUSON
  • 1896 major Supreme Court case
  • Supreme Court ruled that segregation was allowed
    (constitutional) if separate-but-equal
    facilities were provided for blacks
  • Segregation became widespread across the country
    in schools, libraries, parks, restaurants, etc.
  • Black facilities were blatantly inferior and
    unequal
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