reconstruction: the rebuilding of a nation

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List 3 details that you see. When/Where do you think this is? What emotions does the picture draw out?. Reconstruction: The Rebuilding of a Nation. 1865-1877. Recap: How The Civil War Ends. 1864 Union General Sherman “March to the Sea” – TN to Savannah, GA 1864 Lincoln Re-elected - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reconstruction:   The Rebuilding of a Nation

List 3 details that you see.

When/Where do you think this is?

What emotions does the picture draw out?

Page 2: Reconstruction:   The Rebuilding of a Nation
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Reconstruction: The Rebuilding of a

Nation1865-1877

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Recap: How The Civil War Ends

► 1864 Union General Sherman “March to the Sea” – TN to Savannah, GA

► 1864 Lincoln Re-elected

► General Lee surrenders to Grant April 1865

► War ends June 1865

►NOW WHAT?

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Issues of Reconstruction►How will southern states rejoin the

Union?

►What should be done with Southern leaders?

►What rights will African-Americans have?

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Lincoln’s 10% Plan

► His goal is for a quick recovery for the union

► He comes up with a plan to admit southern states back into the Union if 10% of voters swear loyalty

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“Radical” Republicans► Mostly northerners► Want to help African-

Americans get rights

WHO WERE THE RADICALREPUBLICANS?

Freedman’s Bureau► An organization set up

by Congress to assist freed slaves with daily life (provides food, clothing, jobs, education)

Page 12: Reconstruction:   The Rebuilding of a Nation

Josiah Washington, Former Slave in South Carolina:

“The Freedman’s Bureau has been the best thing for my family since Lincoln made his Proclamation in 1863. My sister has been treated

for her illness and her life saved at the Freedman’s Hospital near

Charleston. Plus, my children are starting school this year under the

Freedman’s program.”

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April 1865 –Lincoln is assassinated by

John Wilkes Booth

His VP Andrew Johnson becomes president

Little sympathy for African-American struggles – he fights with the Radical

Republicans!

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Johnson’s PlanAndrew Johnson: “The time has come for us to heal the scars and

wounds of this Great War. We must repair this Union immediately. My Plan for Reconstruction is this. Each state must withdraw its secession, swear allegiance to the Union . . . and ratify the 13th Amendment. With these conditions met, let the states of the South rejoin our great Union. I will pardon Confederate leaders that demonstrate true remorse for their actions, and I do not say that suffrage (voting) is now the right of the freed Negro. No, sir, white men alone must manage the South.”

► Southern states must pass the 13th Amendment (abolish slavery) to re-join the Union

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Friday Back Warm-Up

Journal # 15

Imagine that you are a freed slave, what is the first thing

you do? What goals might you have, how would you achieve

those goals?

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Reconstruction Amendments►13th Amendment (1865): outlaws

slavery

►14th Amendment (1866): guarantees equality to all citizens (including African Americans)

►15th Amendment (1870): gives African American (males only) right to vote

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Black Codes: used to control African-Americans in the South

►No ownership of land►Limited job

opportunities

“1865 has been a terrible year of loss of pride and the Confederacy. However, we will not lose our dignity in our own lands. . . The races must remain separated, and the Negro being inferior must not be allowed to hold power in our communities. We have successfully drafted a measure of Black Codes. This will prevent the Negro from carrying weapons, serving on juries, testifying against Whites, marrying Whites, traveling without a permit, and most of all not owning land.”

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Congress’ Plan: Military Reconstruction Act (1867)

► Divides the south into 5 military districts governed by Union generals until they agreed to the 14th amendment

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Congress vs. Johnson►Johnson tries to fire Secretary

of War (last Radical Republican in his cabinet)

►House votes to impeach Johnson

►Johnson promises to enforce the Reconstruction Acts and avoids removal from office

Impeach: charge with doing something wrong while in office

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Monday Warm-UpCan you pass the

Alabama Voter Literacy Test?

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►Carpetbaggers: People who moved from North to South to take advantage of South and make $$

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Political Cartoons: The Burden of ReconstructionANALYZE

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Life for Freed Slaves► Many freed slaves were

sharecroppers.► A landowner gives a poor

farmer a portion of land to farm with + tools + seed.

► In exchange the sharecropper has to give the landowner most of his crop – can’t ever make enough money to buy his own land

►Effects: It kept freed slaves financially dependent on landowners.

How was this similar and different to slavery?

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Sharecropping Cycle of PovertyCHART

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Other problems for Freed Slaves

1.The Ku Klux Klan - white Southerners who

terrorized African Americans

2. Jim Crow Laws - segregated Southern society –

separate facilities and rules for African Americans

3. Plessy v. Ferguson - Supreme Court case that rules

segregation is legal - “separate but equal”

Segregation:

Separation of the races

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Example of a Jim Crow Law

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How did Reconstruction End? ►White southerners (known as

redeemers) take back power in the South

►The south is nicknamed the “Solid South” because they always vote for the Democratic party

(Remember the Republican Party was anti-slavery and tried to help freed slaves)

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The Compromise of 1877►Rutherford B. Hayes

becomes President but in return he agrees to remove federal troops from the South.

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Effects of ReconstructionQUICK STUDY

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