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Chapter 12- Reconstruction and the New South

Chapter 12- Reconstruction and the New South. I. Rebuilding the Nation. A. Preparing for Reunion. Many problems faced the nation: The South was destroyed, treatment of freedmen , homeless refugees

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Chapter 12- Reconstruction and the New South

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  1. Chapter 12- Reconstruction and the New South I. Rebuilding the Nation

  2. A. Preparing for Reunion • Many problems faced the nation: The South was destroyed, treatment of freedmen, homeless refugees • Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan was very forgiving and gave amnesty to former Confederates who swore a loyalty oath • Radical Republicans argued for a harsher policy, but Lincoln refused to endorse

  3. B. The Freedmen’s Bureau • Provided emergency relief to freedmen and white refugees • Set up schools to educate freedmen • Also helped freedmen with legal problems

  4. C. Lincoln is Murdered • Assassinated five days after Lee’s surrender by John Wilkes Booth • Replaced by Andrew Johnson • Many expected him to take a strict approach with the South

  5. II. The Battle Over Reconstruction

  6. A. A Growing Conflict • In Jan. 1865, the 13th Amendment banned slavery • Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction was very lenient • Black codes were enacted by Southerners to discriminate against freedmen • Radical Republicans wanted to protect freedmen and keep former Confederates from gaining power

  7. B. The 14th Amendment • In response to black codes, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866 • The CRA granted full citizenship and protection of civil rights • The 14th Amendment was passed to make sure the Supreme Court could not strike down the CRA

  8. C. Radical Reconstruction • Violence against African Americans led Radical Republicans to impose military rule • With military protection, African Americans began to vote and hold public office • The Radicals’ dislike for Andrew Johnson led to his impeachment in 1868

  9. D. The Election of 1868 • Ulysses S. Grant is elected • The 15th Amendment guaranteed freedmen the right to vote • Angered by their loss of power, many Southern whites form violent groups to intimidate Republican supporters (KKK)

  10. III. The End of Reconstruction

  11. A. Reconstruction’s Conclusion • Corruption in the Grant administration caused many to lose faith in the Republicans • Democrats regained control in the South, often through terror/violence • Rutherford B. Hayes is elected President in 1876 and removes the military from the South

  12. B. African Americans Lose Rights • Laws were passed to prevent African Americans from voting; poll tax and literacy tests • Grandfather clauses allowed whites to get around voting restrictions • Jim Crow laws established segregation throughout Southern society • Segregation laws upheld in Plessy vs. Ferguson (1896); “separate but equal”

  13. C. A Cycle of Poverty • Poverty forced most African Americans to become sharecroppers • Sharecroppers often became locked into a cycle of debt • Urban African Americans were often forced into low-paying, unskilled jobs

  14. D. Industrial Growth • Southerners started industries to turn raw materials into finished products • Lumber and textile mills; furniture and cigarette factories • The “New South” was no longer dependent on just cotton

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