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Reconstruction: Rebuilding the South and Readmitting into the Union

This article explores the period of Reconstruction in the United States from 1865-1877, focusing on the challenges faced in rebuilding the South after the Civil War and determining the rights of newly freed African-Americans. It discusses three major plans proposed during Reconstruction and their impact on the South's reintegration into the Union.

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Reconstruction: Rebuilding the South and Readmitting into the Union

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  1. Reconstruction1865-1877 Rebuilding the South

  2. Reconstructionhistory.sandiego.edu/GEN/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.htmlReconstructionhistory.sandiego.edu/GEN/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html • Definition: • 1) rebuilding the South • 2) readmitting the South into the Union • 3) determining what to do about the new freedmen

  3. Many Questions • 1) How would the South rebuild their economy? • Land, railroads, plantations were destroyed • 2) How would the South rejoin the Union? • Constitution didn’t have any guidelines • 3) What rights would African-Americans have in the new nation? • They weren’t citizens, couldn’t vote, had no land or jobs

  4. Three Major Plans for Reconstruction • 1) Lincoln’s Plan: easy on South • 2) Radical Republican Plan: easy on blacks • 3) Johnson’s Plan: easy on South, hard on blacks

  5. 1) Lincoln’s Plan (10% Plan) “With malice toward none and charity for all.” Wants the South to rejoin quickly and easily 10% of voters were to swear allegiance to USA and state was to abolish slavery and educate blacks to become citizens Would pardon Confederates Three Major Plans for Reconstructionhttp://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Abraham_Lincoln_seated,_Feb_9,_1864.jpg

  6. Republican Senators Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner 2) Radical Republicans (harsh on South) Blacks to were to become citizens and vote Majority of the state had to swear allegiance before getting admitted Punish Confederates history.sandiego.edu/GEN/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Charles_Sumner_-_Brady-Handy.jpg Three Major Plans for Reconstruction

  7. Wade-Davis Bill • Bill that expressed their ideas • Created by the Radical Republicans to reconstruct the South, this bill said: • 1) majority of South had to swear allegiance • 2) wanted blacks to have guaranteed equality Lincoln vetoed it and the Republicans were shocked

  8. One thing Lincoln did pass Set up to provide food, clothing, education, etc. to freed blacks and white refugees http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_freedman's_bureau.png Freedman’s Bureau

  9. Five Military Districtshistory.sandiego.edu/GEN/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html

  10. Freedmen’s Schoolhttp://www.learnnc.org/lp/multimedia/12778

  11. Freedmen’s Schoolhttp://www.emu.edu/news/index.php/961

  12. Johnson’s Plan: Johnson was from South (born in Raleigh; didn’t have slaves); Democrat Johnson’s Plan (basically like Lincolns: fast and easy readmission) Requirements: citizenship to all but Confed. leaders and wealthy landowners; states must abolish slavery and accept the 13th Amend. Problem: he didn’t want blacks to vote and basically wanted “states rights” to rule (“white rule” basically) http://terrenoire.blogspot.com/2009/02/george-bush-is-not-worst-president-ever.html Three Major Plans for Reconstruction

  13. http://rncnyc2004.blogspot.com/2008_11_01_archive.html Thirteenth Amendment had been passed (set the slaves free) However, Southern whites tried to keep blacks in their place: farmers (landless workers, arrest jobless blacks and send to prison camps, etc) Black Codes!! State Conventions make their decisions

  14. Black Codes • After the Civil War, South Carolinians showed little remorse and began immediately to devise ways of curtailing black freedom. Edmund Rhett summed up the attitude of whites -- black freedoms must be "limited, controlled, and surrounded with such safeguards as will make the change as slight as possible. . . . The general interest of both the white man and the negro requires that he should be kept as near to his former condition as Law can keep him. That he should be kept as near to the condition of slavery as possible, as far from the condition of the white man as practicable." And so South Carolina -- like other Southern states -- developed the "Black Codes."

  15. Black Codes • African Americans were no safer than they had been as slaves. A black, John Picksley, explained, "it is almost a daily occurrence for black men to be hunted down with dogs and shot like wild beasts." One individual remarked that, "since the negro has ceased to be property [they have no] pecuniary value [so] maiming and killing" went unnoticed. • http://chicora.org/heritage-not-hate.html • Blacks couldn’t sit on juries, carry weapons in public, testify against a white man, etc. • http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAkkk.htm

  16. Prison Campshttp://history.sandiego.edu/gen/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html

  17. Radical Republicans are furious at the Slave Codes President Johnson accused the Reps of trying to “Africanize the southern half of our country.” Johnson vetoed the law but it was overridden (1st time major bill overridden) http://www.columbia.edu/itc/law/witt/raw_images/lect17/ Civil Rights Act of 1866(guaranteed blacks civil rights)

  18. Civil Rights Billhttp://history.sandiego.edu/gen/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html

  19. Fourteenth Amendment • Now the Republicans gained confidence • 14th Amendment: blacks (people born in US) given the right to be citizens • This protected the blacks from states’ laws that would take away their rights as freed people (like the right to vote)

  20. Reconstruction Act of 1867 • In order to stop further problems, this law was passed by the Republicans (after Johnson had vetoed it). If the South did these, they could join the Union. • 1) South would be divided into 5 military districts so that blacks could be protected • 2) South had to accept the 14th Amend. and allow/enforce black suffrage (voting) in their new state constitutions • 3) South couldn’t let rich, plantation owners and some ex-Confederates, suffrage rights or from holding office

  21. 5 Military Districtshttp://history.sandiego.edu/gen/civilwar/16/reconstruction1.html

  22. Military Districts keep the peacehttp://afrotexan.com/freedmen/index.htm

  23. Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act: President couldn’t fire a Cabinet member appointed by the President without the approval of Congress (reason: Sec. of War Edwin Stanton was a Rad. Republican) http://www.fifthohiolightartillery.com/ Battle Between Congressand Johnson continues

  24. http://www.stockton.edu/~gilmorew/0impeach/impeachm.htm Johnson fires Stanton Congress decides to impeach Johnson (bring charges against him) Congress doesn’t convict by 1 vote because…a) Lincoln had hired Stanton and b) Johnson promised to follow Reconstruction Acts Tenure of Office Act

  25. Election of 1868http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:1868_Electoral_Map.png

  26. http://www.lowdowncentral.com/who-said-that/2007/9/12/who-said-that.htmlhttp://www.lowdowncentral.com/who-said-that/2007/9/12/who-said-that.html http://www.sonofthesouth.net/union-generals/ulysses-s-grant/ulysses-grant-inaugural-address.htm Grant Wins (#18)

  27. Because the Democrats got a majority of the white vote, the 15th Amendment was passed Gave blacks the right to vote, in both the North and South (13th and 14th were for the former slaves) http://jdhilmer.com/Brandon/15thamendment.htm Fifteenth Amendment

  28. South was dominated by Democrats before the Civil War However, times were changing as the Republicans began to increase their numbers http://www.suite101.com/view_image.cfm/682573 Political Parties in the South:Who’s in Charge?

  29. 1) Free Blacks Love Lincoln’s party 2) Scalawags Southern Whites who support the North 3) Carpetbaggers Northerners coming down to make money http://www.syp.org.uk/get-involved/electoralregistration/electoralregistration.htm Republicans gain numbers in the South (three types of people)

  30. Carpetbaggershttp://caiti-online.blogspot.com/2007_06_01_archive.htmlhttp://www.magicalcat.com/images-recon/hap00068.jpgCarpetbaggershttp://caiti-online.blogspot.com/2007_06_01_archive.htmlhttp://www.magicalcat.com/images-recon/hap00068.jpg

  31. Hiram Revels was the first black man elected to the Senate Guess who he replaced? Jefferson Davis During Reconstruction, 2 blacks were elected to the Senate and 14 to the House of Reps Hiram Revels: Success Storyhttp://www.blackpast.org/?q=aah/revels-hiram-rhoades-1827-1901

  32. Many groups started to stop blacks from getting their rights (Pale Faces, Sons of Midnight, Knights of the White Camellia) The most famous group was “started” by Nathan Bedford Forrest, the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) (was only to be a joke at first) http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nathan_Bedford_Forrest.jpg Southern Whites Upset with Black Political/Economic/Social Advancements

  33. Nathan Bedford Forrest • The KKK was founded on December 24, 1865 by six Confederate veterans in Pulaski, Tennessee. In 1867, at its convention in Nashville, Tennessee, the Klan ordained their first Grand Wizard of the Invisible Empire -- Nathan Bedford Forest. This was the "Fort Pillow Butcher" who was responsible for the massacre of African American troops who tried to surrender at Fort Pillow in April 1864. As even one member of the Confederate 20th Tennessee reported, "The slaughter was awful." Forest, however, was pleased with the outcome, remarking "The river was dyed with the blood of the slaughtered for 200 yards. It is hoped that these facts will demonstrate to the northern people that negro soldiers cannot cope with Southerners." • http://chicora.org/heritage-not-hate.html

  34. Was very wealthy slave owner who had $1.5 million worth of property Asked 44 of his slaves to join him in enlisting and he would set them free at wars end (43 fought with him) Entered the war as a private and left as a General (Cavalry) Had 29-30 horses shot out from under him Some say he never had anything to do with the KKK (Gen. Sherman, who was part of Congressional investigation), but did lend them his name in order to give them some credibility; he ordered the KKK to disband in 1869 (didn’t have enough control) http://www.blueshoenashville.com/history.htmlhttp://books.google.com/books?id=aLXSgDimlD0C&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21&dq=why+did+kkk+end+in+1869&source=web&ots=lsoR1znZ79&sig=5XDziFiq8JqzwPHMmnMuvx1Hr-E&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result#PPA21,M1 Nathan Bedford Forrest

  35. This group attacked blacks and whites (Carpetbaggers and Scalawags) who promoted black suffrage and rights Didn’t want the blacks to vote Republican http://www.learnnc.org/lp/multimedia/12455 Ku Klux Klan (KKK)

  36. White Carpetbaggers too!http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kkk-carpetbagger-cartoon.jpg

  37. The name “ku klux klan” comes from the Greek word “kyklos” which means “circle” (or maybe from the Mexican legend of Cukulcan, “god of light’) Most may have been from Irish/Scottish descent and borrowed the word “clan” http://americanhistory.si.edu/Brown/history/1-segregated/white-only-2.html KKK

  38. Why did they burn crosses? Borrowed the idea actually. • The original Ku Klux Klan, which was founded in 1866 and disbanded in the early 1870s, didn't burn crosses, but that didn't stop author Thomas Dixon from saying they did in his pro-KKK novel The Clansman (1905). "The Fiery Cross of old Scotland's hills!" a character in the book announces. "In olden times when the Chieftain of our people summoned the clan on an errand of life and death, the Fiery Cross, extinguished in sacrificial blood, was sent by swift courier from village to village." • http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1038/why-does-the-ku-klux-klan-burn-crosses

  39. Enforcement Acts (called the KKK Act)Passed by Congress/Grant • Enforcement Acts: • Federal government can prosecute crimes committed by anti-black groups • The Klan disbanded by the early 1870’s and Democrats began winning seats back from the Republicans • http://www.gilderlehrman.org/teachers/seminar_docs/recon_doc2.html

  40. Radical Republican Thadeus Stevens suggested taking from the plantation owners and giving to the poor This wasn’t passed so they were all competing with each other for jobs http://mikeely.wordpress.com/interviews/blacks-and-jews-a-revolutionary-view/ How were freed blacks and poor whites going to survive down South?

  41. http://blackcynic.com/blog/?p=2838 1) Sharecropping: landowner provided shelter, seeds, tools to freedman Instead of getting paid, freedman kept half/third of crops as his payment for shelter, etc. No money given to freedman Two ways of dealing with it

  42. 2) Tenant Farming: basically the same thing but the freedman has to pay cash instead of a share of the crops as payment for shelter, seed, equipment http://rippdemup.blogspot.com/2009/02/black-history-unsung-hero.html Two ways of dealing with it

  43. Sharecropping http://websupport1.citytech.cuny.edu/Faculty/pcatapano/lectures_us2/newsouth.html

  44. http://thesituationist.wordpress.com/2007/12/ This act gave former Confederates (except military generals) the right to vote again (replacing the Reconstruction Act law which disenfranchised them) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amnesty_Act_of_1872 Amnesty Act (1872)

  45. Time to End Reconstruction • 1) Other issues of importance: immigration, political corruption, business • 2) North tired of fighting racial issues and want it to end • 3) Southern governments began to return to the whites (Democrats began pointing out how new schools, roads, hospitals, etc. had raised Southern taxes) (“Redeemers”) • 4) Grant loses favor with the people

  46. Although an honest man, Grant appointed dishonest men, who stole from the government or took bribes, while Grant looked the other way (The Whiskey Ring) People associated their actions with Grant http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h234.html http://americanrevwar.homestead.com/files/civwar/grant.html Grant loses favor with the people

  47. The Whiskey Ring Federal Agents bribed from liquor stillers to pay less taxes Grant’s own Secretary was involved and Grant tried to shield him from prosecution www.american-presidents.org/.../whiskey-ring-scandal.html

  48. Election of 1876Basically, a tie (three states are disputed) • Rep. Rutherford B. Hayes and Dem. Samuel Tildon http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1876_Electoral_Map.png

  49. Compromise of 1877(started by Henry Clay,……I mean… just kidding)

  50. Effects of Reconstruction • 1) Positives: (13th), 14th, and 15th Amendments, tax-supported public schools in South • 2) Negatives: racial bias not dealt with, women can’t vote (although they were the leaders in the suffrage movement), white Southerners still wholly one party (Democrat) and the South became known as the “Solid South”

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