1 / 27

Reconstruction

Unit 8. Reconstruction. Legacy of War. Nationally: 600,000 dead and 1,000,000 wounded War debt and caring for veterans takes up 2/3 of federal budget 13 th amendment adopted in 1865 In the North: Booming economy Expanded railroad system Expanded banking system In the South:

helga
Download Presentation

Reconstruction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 8 Reconstruction

  2. Legacy of War Nationally: • 600,000 dead and 1,000,000 wounded • War debt and caring for veterans takes up 2/3 of federal budget • 13th amendment adopted in 1865 In the North: • Booming economy • Expanded railroad system • Expanded banking system In the South: • Economic collapse • The war destroyed industries, products, farms, etc. • 1865: Held 12% of nation’s wealth • 9000% inflation rate

  3. The war is over…now what? • Take a look at the questions on page 487; what other questions might there have been after the Civil War?

  4. Plans for Reconstruction

  5. Lincoln’s plan for Reconstruction 1863: 10% plan • President in charge of reconstruction • Pardons all citizens in confederate states…except for high ranking officials • If 10% of the population of a state swears allegiance to the union = admitted back to U.S. • A state must offer freedom for African-Americans • Never carried out

  6. Republican plan for Reconstruction 1864: Wade-Davis Bill • Congress in charge of reconstruction • If 50% of the population of a state swears allegiance to the union = admitted back to U.S. • Forbids Confederate officers and politicians from hold political office in the U.S. • A state must offer freedom and rights for African-Americans • Vetoed by Lincoln

  7. Radical Republicans Thaddeus Stevens Charles Sumner

  8. Andrew Johnson 1865: VP Andrew Johnson becomes president • Self-educated • Slave-owner • Southerner • Pro-Union • Pro-states rights

  9. Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction 1865: Presidential Reconstruction • President in charge of reconstruction • All states readmitted if: • If 10% of the population of a state swears allegiance to the union…excluded wealthy land owners from the vote • Repealed secession laws • Ratified 13th amendment • No demand of rights for African-Americans • Pardoned majority of the population

  10. 14th amendment • Created in response to the vetoes of 1866 • Grants citizenship to African-Americans • Prevented the Confederate leaders from holding office unless approved by Congress

  11. Reconstruction Act of 1867 • Divided the south into 5 districts • Each controlled by a Union general • Vetoed by Johnson • Overridden by Congress

  12. Road to Impeachment 1867 • Republicans looked to get rid of Johnson • Republicans passed the Tenure of Office Act • Johnson tests the law and fires the Sec. of War

  13. Impeachment! 1867 • Congress impeaches Johnson • Senate holds the trial • Johnson is found not guilty by 1 vote…Edmund Ross • Johnson stays in office

  14. Grant elected President 1868: • Grant (Rep.) wins in an electoral college landslide • Grant owed his victory to the 500,000 African-Americans who voted for him… • To maintain voting rights for African-Americans Congress issues the 15th Amendment

  15. Grant Administration (1869-1877) Grant’s lack of political experience led to: • Fraud, bribery & corruption among staffers • Economic depression in 1870s • Inability to protect African-American rights • Lack of support for reconstruction • Rise of Democratic control in the south

  16. Social impacts • Problems and questions: • What does freedom mean? • Where would they live? • What work would they do?

  17. Social impacts Solutions… • Move…Where? • West…exodusters

  18. Social impacts Solutions… • Former slaves given the freedom to • worship • Former slaves of all ages sought an education • Governments; churches; charities formed schools and universities • Former slaves form businesses and organizations designed to help other former slaves succeed in life • Freedmen’s Bureau

  19. Social impacts Solutions… • Former slaves become active in politics • By 1867, former slaves were getting elected to political offices • 1870: Hiram Revels becomes the first African-American to serve in the U.S. Senate

  20. Social impacts Solutions… Sharecropping: • System where a farmer tends the owner’s land and receives a share of the profit from the harvest Tenant farming: • Farmers rent the farms from owners Did this help or hurt the ex-slaves?

  21. Problems?

  22. Social impacts Solutions… • Civil Rights Act of 1866: • Restricted states from issuing black codes • Curfews; vagrancy laws; land ownership restrictions • 1866: Johnson vetoed both

  23. Southern reaction to Reconstruction 1866: Ku Klux Klan established in Tennessee • Terrorist organization whose mission was to end reconstruction and suppress African-American rights • Terrorized, beat, and/or killed anyone who challenged their cause • 1868: KKK exists in every state

  24. KKK in the 1870s KKK 1926 KKK 1870

  25. Southern reaction to Reconstruction 1870s • Southern gov’ts pass black codes…Jim Crow laws • Segregation introduced…not fully implemented until 1910 • Race riots and lynching become common

  26. How did the following bring about the end of Reconstruction?

  27. End of Reconstruction • Election of 1876 • Compromise of 1877 • Home Rule • Reconstruction ends

More Related