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Reconstruction Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

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Page 1: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

ReconstructionReconstruction

Restoring relations with the South

[The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Page 2: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

The Road to Reunion FactsThe Road to Reunion Facts• Conditions in the South

– 2/3rd of RR were destroyed– 90% of bridges were destroyed– Farms and plantations were in shambles.– 1000s of disabled soldiers– Cities had been leveled: Charleston, Richmond, Atlanta,

Savannah, (Columbia, SC = “wilderness of ruins”)• Mississippi

– 1/3rd of white men of military age had been killed or disabled – 1/5th of state’s revenue went to provide for artificial limbs for the

soldiers• Death total

– 620,00 men died in the Civil War– North = 364,000 (1 out of 5)– South = 258,000 (1 out of 4)

• $4 billion worth of property destroyed • Freedom given to 4 million African Americans

Page 3: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Ten Percent PlanTen Percent PlanLincoln announced his plans for reconstruction in December 1863.

• Offered amnesty or official forgiveness of crimes to Southerners who pledged an oath of loyalty to the United States and accepted the elimination of slavery

• Applied to everyone except a few high-ranking Confederate officials

• Once 10% of the voters in 1860 had taken the oath of loyalty, those voters could set up a new government.

Page 4: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

New additionsNew additions

• Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee took advantage of this plan and applied for admission to the Union in 1864.

• Congress had problems with this because they felt that Congress was in control of the admittance of new states.

Page 5: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Radical RepublicansRadical Republicansor Radicalsor Radicals

• Some Republican members of Congress wanted to punish the rebellious Southern states and destroy all Southern economic and political powers.

• Opposed slavery and wanted to use federal power to force changes in the South.

Page 6: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Wade-Davis BillWade-Davis Bill

• Sponsors: Benjamin Wade of OH and Henry Winter Davis of MD

• Put South under military rule

• Required a majority of a state’s electorate to take the loyalty oath and the abolition of slavery

• When a majority of the white males of the state make the pledge, the governor can call a state constitutional convention

• Can be elected only if you took the oath

• Lincoln used a pocket veto – didn’t sign it for 10 days will Congress was not in session

Page 7: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

1313thth Amendment Amendment

• Approved by Senate in April 1864 but rejected by the House

• It finally was passed on January 31, 1865 with only 3 more votes than the 2/3rds needed.

The institution that had divided the nation no longer existed.

Page 8: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Quote from Lincoln’s inaugural Quote from Lincoln’s inaugural speech on March 4, 1865speech on March 4, 1865

“With malice toward none; with charity for all; . . . Let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; . . . To do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.”

Page 9: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Frederick Douglass and John Frederick Douglass and John Wilkes Booth attended the Wilkes Booth attended the

second inauguration of second inauguration of Abraham Lincoln.Abraham Lincoln.

Page 10: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Lincoln’s assassinationLincoln’s assassination

• Good Friday @ Ford’s Theatre on April 14, 1865 while watching the play Our American Cousin

• Assassin– John Wilkes Booth

Page 12: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Reactions to Lincoln’s death . . .Reactions to Lincoln’s death . . .

• Radical Republicans –viewed it with relief because they had feared that former Southern leaders would regain power under Lincoln (now they could enforce their harsher views)

• Others viewed it as a tragedy.

• The shocked country deeply mourned.

Page 13: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Lincoln’s FuneralLincoln’s Funeral

• Funeral – Gen. Grant openly

wept.– April 21st a funeral

train carrying Lincoln’s body began its journey from D.C. to his home of Springfield, Illinois.

– The President became one of the causalities of the war.

Page 14: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

1717thth President of President of the United States . . .the United States . . .

Andrew JohnsonAndrew Johnson

Page 15: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Views of the new PresidentViews of the new President• Vowed to keep the policies of Lincoln’• Southern Democrat (TN)• Radicals thought he’d keep the Southerners out

of office which would allow former slaves to take office

• Former slave holder who cared little about the rights of African Americans

• “White men alone must manage the South.”• Represented the ideas of small farmers and

mountaineers

Page 16: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Johnson’s Plan for ReconstructionJohnson’s Plan for Reconstruction

• 2 proclamations:– Offered amnesty and return of property – except

slavery – to all who take the oath of loyalty to the Union (They could appeal to President for pardon.)

– Each state would be appointed a temporary governor who would oversee the election of convention delegates. Only those who have taken the oath could vote or serve as delegates.

• New state constitutions could be written.• Had to ratify 13th amendment, declare secession

illegal, and agree not to pay Confederate debts

Page 17: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Radical OppositionRadical Opposition

• Johnson’s plan had allowed the return of Confederate leaders. – Mississippians elected a former Confederate general

as governor.– Georgia voters chose Alexander Stephens (VP of

CSA) as US Senator.

• Johnson could have called for new elections but that would be admitting that his plan had failed.

• Instead, he gave pardons to nearly every Confederate leader who asked for it.

Page 18: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

In 1865, Jefferson Davis In 1865, Jefferson Davis tried to flee into Mexico.tried to flee into Mexico.

He was caught and imprisoned for two years.

Page 19: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Black CodesBlack CodesThese were not as strict as the slave codes before the Civil War.These were not as strict as the slave codes before the Civil War.

• These were restrictive laws that applied only to African Americans. (They were denied the right to vote, an opportunity to learn, and freedom to work.)– SC – AA had to have licenses to do any jobs other

than farm work.– MS – prevented them from buying or even renting

farmland– Vagrancy laws in many states imposed fines on

unemployed AA. They would be auctioned off to white landowners who paid their fine.

• President did nothing.

Page 20: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Civil Rights LawsCivil Rights Laws

Page 21: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Freedmen’s BureauFreedmen’s Bureau

• Created in March 1865

• It worked to provide education, housing, and other improvements for African Americans in the South.

• Johnson vetoed the bill.

The Freedmen's Bureau spent $17,000 to help establish homes and distribute food, established 4,000 schools and 100 hospitals for former slaves. This Bureau also helped freedmen find new jobs.

Page 22: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Civil Rights Act of 1866Civil Rights Act of 1866

• Radicals response to the Freedmen’s Bureau veto

• Guaranteed African Americans some basic rights of citizens, such as owning property and bringing lawsuits.

• Johnson vetoed it.• Radicals and Moderate Republicans made

history with the 1st override of a presidential veto on a significant matter.

• They went on to pass the Freedmen’s Bureau over the President’s veto.

Page 23: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Bill of Rights finally Bill of Rights finally apply to apply to ALLALL Americans. Americans.

Thanks to the Civil Rights Act

of 1866

Page 24: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

1414thth Amendment Amendment Defined citizenship to include African

Americans

Johnson fought against its ratification.

Page 25: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Between 1865 and 1868, Between 1865 and 1868, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Minnesota,

Connecticut, Nebraska, Ohio, Connecticut, Nebraska, Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and

Michigan denied suffrage to Michigan denied suffrage to African Americans.African Americans.

Page 26: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Radical ReconstructionRadical Reconstruction

By 1868, LA, AL, AK, FL, NC, and SC had met the new requirements of rewriting

their constitutions to allow for the freedom of African

Americans and regained their statehood.

Page 27: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Command of the Army Act, 1867Command of the Army Act, 1867

It severely limited the President’s power as commander in chief.

Page 28: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Tenure of Office ActTenure of Office Act

It required Senate approval for the President to remove any government official, including cabinet

members, whose appointments had required

its consent.

Page 29: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Johnson’s reactionJohnson’s reaction

• He had long wanted to get rid of Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, because Stanton openly sided with the Radicals.

• So he dismissed him during a Congressional recess.

• Stanton barricaded himself inside his office and refused to be fired.

• The issue went to the Supreme Court.

Page 30: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

ImpeachmentImpeachment

• On February 24, 1868, for the first time in American history the House voted 126 to 47 to impeach a President.

• According to the Constitution, the House can vote to impeach the President for “high crimes and misdemeanors.”

• Most charges against Johnson arose from his dismissal of Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, which allegedly violated the Tenure of Office Act. Johnson claimed the act was unconstitutional. Years later the Supreme Court agreed.

Page 31: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Johnson’s impeachmentJohnson’s impeachment

• House – sole power of impeachment• Senate – acts as the jury• Chief Justice of U.S. Supreme Court – acts as

judge• To be officially removed from office, one has to

be found guilty by 2/3rd of the Senators.• FINAL VOTE: 35 to 19 (1 ballot shy of the 2/3rd

needed)• Checks and balances in action

Page 32: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Election of 1868Election of 1868

Page 33: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Presidential Election of 1868Presidential Election of 1868

• Radical Republicans chose General Ulysses S. Grant.

• Democrats nominated Horatio Seymour (former governor of NY)

• Winner is . . . with 214 out of 294 electoral votes . . .

Page 34: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

1818thth President of President of the United Statesthe United States

General Ulysses S. Grant

Page 35: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

The Plight of WorkersThe Plight of Workers

• To have social and economic status in the South one needed land

• Tenant farmers – farmed land that they rented

• Sharecroppers – people who worked the owner’s land and received a share of the crops in return

Page 36: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

The Freedmen’s BureauThe Freedmen’s Bureau

• An agency of the army directed by General Oliver O. Howard.

• Distributed food to million of former slaves• Made efforts to settle African Americans

on their own land• Provided medical help• Tried to help them find jobs• By 1867- it had started 46 hospitals and

staffed them with doctors and nurses.

Page 37: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

SetbacksSetbacks

• At first the Bureau provided for the sale of land to freed people.

• African Americans began working the land in hopes of buying it.

• President Johnson’s Reconstruction program ordered this land back to its original owners.

Page 38: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Bureau’s achievements Bureau’s achievements lay in educationlay in education

• Started free public schools for African American men, women, and children

• Private organizations like missionary societies supplied teachers and books.

• 1869-more than 247,000 students attended 4,329 schools

• Established colleges like Howard University, Fisk University, and Hampton Institute

• Bureau ended in 1872

Page 39: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Before the Civil War, there Before the Civil War, there were laws banning African were laws banning African

Americans from wearing things Americans from wearing things that would make them look that would make them look

white.white.

Wearing hats

Carrying canes

Looking white people in the eye

Page 40: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

In summer of 1865, some freed In summer of 1865, some freed people began donning on hats, people began donning on hats, twirling canes, and refusing to twirling canes, and refusing to yield the right of way to whites.yield the right of way to whites.

Page 41: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Ku Klux KlanKu Klux Klan• Terrorist bands formed to

defend the South’s old way of life

• Took names like --- the Regulators, the Knights of the White Camelia, and the Ku Klux Klan

• Pulaski, TN – former Confederate cavalry leader Nathan Bedford Forrest organized the KKK in 1866 --- it became the most powerful of the protective societies.

KKK comes from the Greek word “Kiklos” which means circle..

Page 42: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Ku Klux KlanKu Klux Klan

• Wore hoods over their heads to hide their identity• Padded horses’ hooves to silence their approach• At first, they claimed that they wanted only to scare African

Americans who acted too independently.• Launched a reign of terror and began whipping and

murdering those who refused to be scared• Killed 1000s of African Americans and their white friends• Beat and wounded many more and burned homes,

schools, and churches• President Grant used the Civil Rights Act of 1871 to

arrest 5,000 Klansmen across the South.• For a while, they were disbanded.

Page 43: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

African Americans in politicsAfrican Americans in politics• 1868 - 700,000 turned out

for the Republican party and contributed to Grant’s victory

• Grant appointed 2 African American justices of the peace in D.C.

• Held 15 or 20 percent of political offices

• Held offices as lieutenant governors, secretaries of state, and treasurers in state gov’ts of SC, FL, MS, and LA

• MS elected 2 to Senate (Hiram Revels and Blanche Bruce)

• Southern states sent 20 to House of Representatives

• SC elected 8 to Congress

Page 44: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

CarpetbaggersCarpetbaggersTerm that Southerners

used to refer to Northerners who moved

to the South during Reconstruction looking for

business opportunities

Page 45: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

ScalawagsScalawags

• Were former Whigs or Southerners interested in the economic development of the South joined Republican governments.

• Most Southerners considered scalawags disloyal.

Page 46: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Civil Rights ShowdownCivil Rights Showdown

Page 47: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Civil Rights Act of 1875 Civil Rights Act of 1875

• 1870 – Sen. Sumner introduced a bill to limit racial discrimination in public places such as streetcars, hotels, churches, and cemeteries.

• 1874 – His bill came before the House—former VP of CSA led the opposition

• While the Civil War had brought them political freedom, this bill would offer them civil freedom as well.

Page 48: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Civil Rights Act of 1875Civil Rights Act of 1875

• Senate passed the bill in May 1874 (2 months after Sumner’s death).

• Feb. 1875, the Civil Rights Act of 1875 passed in both houses and went into effect.

• However, the Justice Dept. made little efforts to enforce it and it was ruled unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court in 1883.

Page 49: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

African Americans’ struggle for African Americans’ struggle for equality would continue into equality would continue into

the twentieth century.the twentieth century.

Page 50: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

SegregationSegregation

It means separating people of different races.

Page 51: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

SegregationSegregation

• Poll taxes – required votes to pay a fee each time they voted

• Literacy tests – asked voters to read and explain a difficult part of the Constitution

• Grandfather Clause – permitted more whites to vote – if the voter’s father or grandfather had voted in 1867, then the voter was excused from the poll or literacy tax

Page 52: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Jim Crow LawsJim Crow Laws

• Southern states passed laws that separated blacks and whites in schools, churches, restaurants, theaters, trains, streetcars, playgrounds, hospitals, beaches, and even cemeteries

Page 53: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Plessy vs. Ferguson

• 1896 – Supreme Court allowed segregation as long as separate facilities for blacks and whites were equal.

• Only Justice John Marshall Harlan dissented. The former slave owner from KY wrote, “The law regards man as man and takes no account of his color when his civil rights are involved.”

Page 54: Reconstruction Restoring relations with the South [The 12 year period following the Civil War (1865-1877)]

Laws passed during Reconstruction became the basis

of the civil rights movement almost 100 years later.