civil war and reconstruction (1861-1877)

53
Civil war and Reconstruction (1861-1877) Tai Barber, Sameera Hosein, Hannah Ngo, Daylan Holman, and Benji Son

Upload: lawson

Post on 23-Jan-2016

49 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Civil war and Reconstruction (1861-1877). Tai Barber, Sameera Hosein, Hannah Ngo, Daylan Holman, and Benji Son. Presidents of the civil war. Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865) First Republican President Issued the Emancipation Proclamation Gave the Gettysburg Address - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Civil war and Reconstruction (1861-1877)

Tai Barber, Sameera Hosein, Hannah Ngo, Daylan Holman, and Benji Son

Page 2: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Presidents of the civil war• Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865)

− First Republican President − Issued the Emancipation Proclamation − Gave the Gettysburg Address− Strong supporter of the 13th amendment− 10% plan: a state could be reintegrated into union

if 10% of its voters in the election of 1860 take an oath of allegiance to US and abide by Emancipation.

Page 3: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Presidents of civil war continued• Jefferson Davis (1861-1865)

− President of Confederate States of America.− Democrat.− CSA could not deny future secession because it was created by secession.

Page 4: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Presidents of reconstruction era• Andrew Johnson (1865-1869)

− Democrat− First President to be impeached − Opposed 14th amendment − Purchased Alaska (Seward’s Folly)

Page 5: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Presidents of reconstruction era continued

• Ulysses S Grant (1869-1877)− Supporter of 15th amendment − Republican− Youngest President− Known for appointing people who were not of good character− Signed Civil Rights Act of 1870 and 1875

Page 6: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

The cause and effects• Causes

− Slavery− States Rights− 11 Southern states seceding from the Union

• Effects− Emancipation Proclamation− Jim Crow Laws− KKK (against Radical rule)

Page 7: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Famous Generals • Confederate

− Robert E Lee− “Stonewall” Jackson− Pierre Gustave Toutant de Beauregard

• Union − Ulysses S Grant− George McClellan− General William Tecumseh Sherman− George Meade

Page 8: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Major Battles of the Civil

War

Page 9: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

• Battle of Fort Sumter (1861)• First Battle of Bull Run (1861)• Peninsular Campaign (1862)• Battle of Antietam (1862)• Battle of Gettysburg (1863)• Battle of Vicksburg (1863) • Sherman’s March to the Sea (1864)

Page 10: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Battle of fort Sumter• April 12 1861• Marked the beginning of the Civil War when

Confederates shot fire at Fort Sumter in Charleston, North Carolina.

Page 11: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

First Battle of bull run• July 1861• Confederate win• Union thought they could easily beat the

Confederacy.• Showed that the war would not be ending

anytime soon.• Promoted the myth that the Confederacy was

invincible in battle.

Page 12: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)
Page 13: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

• March 1862• Confederate win.• Union’s goal was to take the Confederacy’s

capital city, Richmond.• Responded by Lee in his seven days war. • Total War Strategy

PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN

Page 14: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Battle of Antietam • Sept. 17 1862• Turning point of the war.• Bloodiest day of war.• First union victory.• Union soldier found Lee’s plans and the Union

army was able to intercept Lee and his army.• First time to photograph the battle field.• Launched the Emancipation Proclamation.• Prevented Paris and London from intervening

and attacking Richmond

Page 15: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)
Page 16: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Battle of Gettysburg

• July 1 1863• Union victory • Biggest battle of the war• North gets foreign aid.• North proves that they are serious about fighting

to countries over seas. • Lee’s army is forced to retreat and never gains

back the offensive. • No hope left for the Confederacy to win.

Page 17: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Battle of Vicksburg• July 4 1863• Union gains control of Mississippi River and cut

Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas from the rest of the Confederacy.

• Union victory

Page 18: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Sherman’s march to sea• November 15- December 21 1864• Across Georgia and swept north into South

Carolina• Destroyed everything that the enemy could

survive on.

Page 19: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Appomattox Court house• April 1865• Lee surrenders to Grant along with the

remaining Confederate forces.• WAR IS OVER!!!!!!!!!

Page 20: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Reconstruction

Page 21: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Reconstruction (1865-1877)• What was it?

− The reconstruction era was the time right after the Union victory in the Civil War, when Andrew Johnson led the rebuilding of the South. This period was mainly to help the newly freed slaves, but caused the rise of extreme racists like the Ku Klux Klan. Many believe that the Reconstruction was ultimately a failure due to the rise in such violence and discrimination.

Page 22: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

• African American Aid− 1865- Congress establishes the Freedman’s Bureau

• The Bureau's task was to help the Southern blacks and whites make the transition from slavery to freedom.

− Free labor, 3,000 new schools, securing justice in courts

− Radical Reconstruction (1867)• Blacks gain voice in government• Created in response to the black codes

− Restrictive laws that were placed by new Southern State legislators that controlled labor and behavior of former slaves

• Infuriated northerners

Page 23: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)
Page 24: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

−Civil Rights Act of 1866• granted equality to ALL men in the

United States "without distinction of race or color, or previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude.“

• Was vetoed by Johnson, but overturned by 2/3 of congress

−Led to the impeachment of Andrew Johnson

−Also led to the growth of the Radical Republicans

Page 25: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Social Ideologies• Even though blacks were given full equal rights

and citizenship, they were still considered inferior to whites

• Blacks still faced extreme discrimination and racism

• Land given to freed blacks by Union general Sherman was taken away in 1865 by president Johnson, and gave them 44 million acres of unfertile and swampy land.

Page 26: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

• KKK would constantly kill off livestock belonging to blacks

• Whites would try refraining from hiring blacks• Blacks were pressured into not placing their votes

in the ballot• Black codes restricted rights of black

businessmen

Page 27: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

All in all, although over 360,000 black lives were lost for the fight for their freedom, complete privileges were not offered until late into the 20th century with the help of Martin Luther King Jr.

Page 28: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Supreme Court Decisions

Page 29: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Civil Rights Act of 1875• One of Congress’s greatest advocates for black

civil rights, Senator Charles Sumner help drafted the Civil Rights Act of 1875.

• Prohibited discrimination against blacks in public place, such as inns, amusement parks, and on public transportation.

Page 30: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Supreme court decision• The United States Supreme Court ruled that the

Civil Rights Act of 1875 was unconstitutional and unauthorized by the 13th and 14th amendment for the Act regulated private company and individual actions rather than state government. It represented the last Congressional effort to protect the civil rights of African-Americans for more than half a century.

Page 31: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Colfax County Massacre• In 1873 the KKK massacre in Louisiana led to

the first Supreme Court gun rights.• The government charged that the KKK mob had

violated black citizens to keep and bear arms.

Page 32: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

United States v. Cruikshank• Lower court ruling in Cruikshank held that

individuals hold the rights to bare arm.• BUT the United States supreme court reversed

the decision ruling that the second amendment protected only state militia.

Page 33: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Major Political Parties’

PlatformsAlong with involved third parties

Page 34: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Republicans

Page 35: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Platform Dominant force within the North.

Favoured industrialists, bankers, railroad interests, hard money policies, and strict laissez-faire economic policies.

Advocated moralistic policies based on Evangelical Protestant values. Supported restrictions on the sale & use of

alcohol. Support from Methodists and Baptists of the

Northeast & Midwest.

Page 36: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Democrats

Page 37: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Platform Dominant force within the South

Favoured a confined and minimal federal government and states’ rights Equal rights of all Untied States citizens. Equal taxation to all.

Page 38: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Third PartiesRadical

RepublicansLiberal

Republicans

Page 39: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

PlatformsRadical

Republicans Demanded civil rights

for freedmen.− Initiated the

Reconstruction Acts.

Supported Ulysses S. Grant Grant sided with them

when it came to Reconstruction policies.

Signed the Civil Rights Act of 1871.

Liberal Republicans

Opposed the re-election of Ulysses S. Grant.

Defeated and vanished after the elections. Reform Republicans

accomplished the election of Rutherford B. Hayes who gradually brought Reconstruction to an end.

Page 40: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Civil War/ Reconstruction

Amendments

Page 41: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

13th Amendment

Abolished slavery and involuntary servitude within the United States or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

Ratified by the states on 6th December 1865.

Page 42: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

14th Amendment

Granted citizenship to all those born in the States, including former slaves. Provided all citizens with equal protection under the

laws. Extended provisions of the Bill of Rights.

Ratified by the states on 9th July 1868.

Overturned Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857).

Page 43: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

15th Amendment

Ratified on the 3rd January 1870.

Prohibited states from disenfranchising citizens the right to vote on account of race, colour, or past servitude. Left open the possibility that states could institute

voter qualifications such as literacy tests.

Page 44: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Technology

Page 45: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Telegraph• was invented by Samuel Morse in 1844• Was mostly used for military purposes• By 1860 construction of a line across the

continent to connect New York with San Francisco and all major points between began

Page 46: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Railroads• The Civil War was the first war to use railroads• South had just 9,000 miles of track • North had about 20,000 miles of track• Lincoln supported the building of the railroads

Page 47: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

photography• The civil war was the first war to document the

war using a camera • Was invented by the assistant of Samuel Morse,

who built the telegraph

Page 48: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Submarines • submarines were used by both sides• Confederates carried out the first ever

submarine to attack to successfully sink an enemy ship

• David Bushnell buit the first submarine called the turtle

Page 49: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Last but not least the Cotton Gin• Eli Whitney was the inventor of the cotton gin • Cotton gin could generate up to fifty pounds of

cleaned cotton daily, making cotton production profitable for the southern states

Page 50: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Publications

Page 51: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Before American censorship of wars, soldiers were able to writ about anything and everything thy wanted

Page 52: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Gone with the wind a novel written by Margaret Mitchell, first published in 1936Is written about the aftermath of Sherman’s march to the sea

Page 53: Civil war  and Reconstruction  (1861-1877)

Uncle Toms Cabin• is an anti-slavery novel by American

author Harriet Beecher Stowe• Published in 1852• Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best-selling

novel of the 19th century[7] and the second best-selling book of that century, following the Bible

• Called the “book that started the war”