The Ordeal of Reconstruction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

The Ordeal of Reconstruction

Description:

The Ordeal of Reconstruction Chapter 22 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:125
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: JohnSt262
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Ordeal of Reconstruction


1
The Ordeal of Reconstruction
  • Chapter 22

2
The Problems Of Peace
  • Major questions facing the country
  • How would the south be rebuilt
  • How would the liberated Blacks be converted to
    free citizens
  • How would southern states be reintegrated into
    the Union
  • Who would direct reconstruction, the southern
    states, the President or Congress
  • What to do with confederate leaders?

3
Major Problems InThe South
  • Social and economic system had collapsed.
  • Key Southern cities were devastated.
  • Banking system had collapsed under run-away
    inflation.
  • Factories were destroyed
  • Transportation system completely broken down
  • Agriculture, major economic force of the south,
    totally collapsed.
  • Southern rich were suddenly much poorer.
  • Many Southerners were beaten but still defiant
    and were not yet emotionally prepared to
    reintegrate with the north.

4
Freedmen Define Freedom
  • Immediately after war, freedom for Blacks
    depended on where the army was located.
  • Many whites in South rejected the validity of
    Emancipation Proclamation
  • Reaction of Blacks
  • Blacks hit the road
  • Exodusters
  • Black schools
  • Black churches

5
The Freedmens Bureau
  • Congress creates the Freedmens Bureau March,
    1865.
  • Purpose?
  • Greatest success?
  • Failed to provide land, as authorized
  • Blacks and labor contracts

6
Freedmens Bureau School
7
Southern View of Freedmens Bureau
8
Southern View of Freedmens Bur.
  • Southerners resented the Bureau as northern
    intrusion.
  • Pres. Johnson didnt support it. Why?
  • It died in 1872.
  • One of many failures of reconstruction.

Plenty to eat and nothing to do.
9
Johnson The Tailor President
  • He had started from very humble beginnings.
  • Never attended school.
  • Enters politics in Tenn.
  • Champion of poor whites and mountain whites.
  • As Tenn. Congressman he refused to secede with
    Tenn.
  • Forced to flee Tenn.

10
Johnson The Tailor President
  • Appointed War Governor after Tenn. partially
    redeemed by Union Army.
  • Appointed VP when Lincoln needs to cement the
    Union Party and keep the vote of border states
    and Union democrats.
  • Dogmatic believer in States Right and the
    Constitution.
  • See John Tyler

11
Presidential Reconstruction
  • Lincoln plan proposed before war over.
  • What is Lincolns basic theory
  • What is the basic condition for states to be
    redeemed?
  • Who does Lincoln think should be in charge or
    reconstruction? Why?
  • How does Congress feel about his plan? Why?
  • Lincolns 10 Plan. Details

12
Congress Reacts
  • Congress disagreed with Lincolns approach.
  • Congressional Republican theory?
  • Who in charge of readmission?.
  • Radical Republican Goals.
  • Congress passes the Wade-Davis Bill in 1864
  • What does it say?
  • What happened to this bill?

13
Johnsons Plan for Reconstruction
  • Johnson agreed with Lincolns 10 plan.
    Recognized several 10 governments.
  • Introduced his plan 8/1865.
  • Disenfranchised southerners with property over
    20,000.
  • They could petition him for a pardon
  • called for special state conventions
  • to repeal declarations of secession,
  • repudiating confederate debts and
  • ratifying 13th Amendment prohibiting slavery
  • Who deals with former slaves?
  • How does Congress React? Why?

14
Black Codes
  • New states passed Black Codes
  • Harsh
  • Purpose?
  • Southern concerns and motives?
  • Consequences
  • For blacks
  • politically

15
Congressional Reconstruction
  • 1865. States readmitted by Johnson start sending
    Congressmen to Washington.
  • Many are former Confederate politicians and
    Generals.
  • Republicans outraged
  • Why?
  • Congress reaction?
  • This sets up a monumental show-down with Johnson

16
Johnson Clashes With Congress
  • Johnson reacts strongly to Congress
  • Johnson announces that South had satisfied his
    conditions and Union was restored.
  • Vetoed extension of Freedmans Bureau.
  • Civil Rights Act.
  • What does the Act do?
  • What does Johnson do to the bill. What does
    Congress do in response?

17
Fourteenth Amendment
  • Why does Congress propose?
  • What does it say?
  • Conferred Civil Rights except the vote on
    Freedmen.
  • Reduced representation in Congress of states that
    did not give the freedmen the vote.
  • Disqualified from federal and state office former
    confederates who had previously sworn oath to
    Const. of the US and, thus, had violated it.
  • Repudiated the confederate debt.
  • Extended Due Process to all citizens.
  • Ratified in 1868

18
Johnsons Back-firing Campaign
  • 1866 Johnson and Congress battle over whether
    reconstruction would continue with or without the
    14th Amendment.
  • The battle-ground became the Congressional
    elections.
  • Johnson hoped for a majority in favor of his soft
    approach.
  • Republicans sought a congress that was
    veto-proof.
  • Johnson goes on a give-em-hell campaign swing
    to try to marshal votes.
  • Johnsons efforts backfire. Why?
  • Result?

19
SWINGING AROUND THE CIRCLE WITH JOHNSON
20
Republicans In Charge
  • Republicans now in the drivers seat, but split
    between the radicals and the moderates.
  • Radicals led by Charles Sumner in the Senate and
    Thaddeus Stevens in the house.
  • Aims of Radicals?
  • Aims of Moderates?
  • Moderates had the upper hand
  • Eventual policies showed influences of both
  • Both recognize that federal power necessary to
    ensure enfranchisement of blacks.

21
Military Reconstruction
  • Reconstruction Act (March 1867)
  • What did it do?
  • Temporarily disenfranchised many
    southerners10,000
  • Stringent conditions for the readmission of the
    seceded states
  • States required to ratify Fourteenth Amendment to
    come back in
  • State constitutions must guarantee vote for
    slaves
  • Stopped short of giving blacks land or requiring
    education.
  • Johnson vehemently opposes.

22
Military Reconstruction Act
23
Military Reconstruction
  • 15th Amendment passed 1869 (ratified in 1870).
  • Why necessary after Reconstruction Act?
  • Military reconstruction questionable
    constitutionally. Why?
  • By 1870 all states readmitted under terms of
    Reconstruction Act.
  • Last federal troops leave in 1877.

24
Radical Reconstruction In The South
  • Evolution of attitude toward black
    enfranchisement.
  • Blacks voting, but many whites werent.
  • Union Leagues
  • 14 Black Congressmen 2 Black Senators. Height
    of black political power until mid 20th Century.
  • Carpetbaggers and Scalawags.
  • Assessment of reconstruction governments in the
    South

25
Ku Klux Klan
  • KKK (Invisible Empire of the South)
  • Used intimidation, fear and force to get upstart
    Blacks and carpetbaggers to get back in their
    place.
  • Founded by Nathan Bedford Forrest.
  • Undermined the civil rights given to blacks.

26
Johnson Impeachment
  • Radical Republicans frustrated with Johnson and
    out for his hide.
  • Tenure in Office Act (1867). Provisions?
  • How does Johnson violate the act?
  • Constitutionality of act?
  • House vote for impeachment
  • Factors impacting the Senate vote

27
The Purchase Of Alaska
  • One of Johnsons few successes was the purchase
    of Alaska.
  • Why were Russians looking to unload Alaska?
  • Sec. of State Seward agrees to purchase for 7.2
    Mil in 1867. Dubbed Sewards Folly.
  • Why was US willing to purchase?

28
STUDY!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com