reconstruction standard 3.3

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Reconstruction Standard 3.3

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Reconstruction Standard 3.3 . How can Northern resources help the South? Will they? In what ways can the South rebuild its economy? What can the Government do to assist African Americans?. How is reconstruction going to work?. Abraham Lincoln’s plan. Andrew Johnson’s plan. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

ReconstructionStandard 3.3

Page 2: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

How can Northern resources help the South? Will they?

In what ways can the South rebuild its economy?

What can the Government do to assist African Americans?

Page 3: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

HOW IS RECONSTRUCTION GOING TO WORK?

Ten Percent Plan: Government would pardon all confederate states if 10% of the voters in the 1860 election took this oath of allegiance.

*Excludes Confederate leaders & wealthy landowners•Congress rejects new Southern govts. and congressmen

Abraham Lincoln’s plan Andrew Johnson’s plan

Radical Republicans think these plans are too lenient

Page 4: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION

Page 5: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Radical Republicans- led by Thaddeus Stevens of Penn. and Charles Sumner of Mass.- wanted to destroy all political power of former slaveholders

Expected full rights to be given to freedmen

Congress passes the Wade-Davis bill- that Congress should be over Reconst. -Lincoln vetoes- power struggle betw. Pres. and Congress

Page 6: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Lincoln dies- April 1865

Johnson’s plan does nothing to solve problems of landowning, voting and protection of the freed slaves

Johnson pardoned Confederate leaders-many of the same people were elected

Congress convenes and refuses to seat the new southern representatives

Page 7: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION

Page 8: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Congressional Reconstruction

Reconstruction Act of 1867 divides

Confederacy into districts-troops stationed in each

Fourteenth Amendment grants full citizenship to African Americans

Freedmen’s Bureau provides social services, medical care, education to Southern blacks and poor whites

Page 9: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

MILITARY DISTRICTS

Page 10: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Military Districts

Page 11: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Southern states passed Black Codes - laws that limited southern blacks politically, socially and economically- no blacks on juries- can’t carry guns, no travel without permits, etc.

Page 12: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

JOHNSON IS IMPEACHED!

Johnson is impeached- he fired Sec. of War Stanton and broke the Tenure of Office Act

Real reason for impeachment: b/c he did not enforce reconstruction

laws in the South

Page 13: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Ulysses S. Grant (Union general) is elected president in 1868 and received 90% of African-American votes

Fifteenth Amendment: African Americans are granted suffrage

Page 14: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

CHANGES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS Hiram Revels: is first black senator (Miss.) Sharecropping: a family would farm a

portion of someone’s land in exchange for housing and a share of the crop.

Tenant Farming: families would rent the land and farm it.

Ku Klux Klan: Southern group which formed during reconstruction and became a violent terrorist organization. Wanted to restore white supremacy

Page 15: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Sharecropping in Arkansas Included both freed slaves and poor whites

Farmed the land in exchange for part of the crop and housing

Page 16: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Ku Klux Klan meeting

Known for cross burning and violence towards African Americans

Developed during Reconstruction in the South

Page 17: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

SOUTHERN BITTERNESS Carpetbaggers: Northerners

who migrated South for business. Southerners saw these carpetbaggers as taking advantage of them.

Scalawags: Southerners who supported reconstruction

Page 18: Reconstruction Standard 3.3
Page 19: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

DEMOCRATS REDEEM THE SOUTH*1876 Rutherford B. Hayes Republican) is elected president (over Samuel J. Tilden)- election was questioned

The Compromise of 1877 – struck deal election Hayes and ending Reconstruction

Southern state governments redeem their power in the South and reconstruction ends (Redemption Governments)

Page 20: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

Jim Crow laws kept the races separate by segregating facilities – Plessy v. Ferguson said separation of the races is legal as long as the facilities are equal

Literacy tests, poll taxes and the Grandfather clause keep African Americans from voting

Page 21: Reconstruction Standard 3.3

END OF RECONSTRUCTION