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Reconstruction: Challenges and Progress after the Civil War

Learn about the conditions in Georgia at the end of the Civil War, the difficulties faced by freedmen, and the different phases of reconstruction. Explore the important amendments and plans that shaped the country's progress during this period.

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Reconstruction: Challenges and Progress after the Civil War

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  1. Warm Up What does it mean to reconstruct?  How do we apply to this period after the Civil War?  Explain.

  2. Reconstruction: Front End Load

  3. Conditions in Georgia at the end of the war: • farms were in ruins • homes, railways, bridges,roads were destroyed or in need of repair • not enough food • banks were closed – Confederate money was worthless • the state owed $20,000,000 in war debt • 25,000 Georgians had died of wounds or disease – many more were crippled and could not work

  4. The Freedmen • Problems of freedmen (former slaves): • homeless • hungry • uneducated • free for the 1st time • no property or goods • Many former slaves feared re-enslavement • Most whites had difficulty treating freeman as free persons

  5. Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan • In addition to Lincoln’s requirements, President Johnson added a few more. Southern states had to: • approve (ratify) the 13th Amendment (outlawing slavery); • nullify their ordinances of secession; • promise not to repay money borrowed during the war. Click to return to the Table of Contents

  6. The Constitutional Convention of 1865 • President Johnson appointed James Johnson as Georgia’s provisional Governor. • Governor Johnson held a Constitutional Convention. The representatives voted to abolish slavery and repeal the ordinance of secession. • Elections were held in November 1865 for a new legislature. • The General Assembly voted to extend rights to freedmen.

  7. Congressional Reconstruction • Congress was angry about Georgia’s Black Codes, so it passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866. This law gave: • citizenship to all freedmen; • the federal government had power to intervene any time civil rights were taken from freedmen. • The 14th Amendment was passed granting citizenship to freedmen and required “equal protection under the law.”

  8. Congressional Reconstruction • Congress required southern states to ratify the 14th Amendment. • Georgia and most of the other southern states refused. • Congress abolished these states’ governments and put them under military rule. • Georgia was ruled by General John Pope. • Pope was required to register all male voters – black and white. These voters would elect new representatives to form a new state government.

  9. African Americans in Politics • The election of 1867 was the first time African Americans had voted. • Several African Americans were elected to Georgia’s General Assembly. • Rev. Henry McNeal Turner was one of the first black men elected in Georgia. • The African Americans elected to the General Assembly were expelled in 1868. • It was argued by whites that civil rights laws gave blacks the right to vote but not to be elected.

  10. Economic Reconstruction • Without slaves, landowners needed laborers to work their large farms. • Two systems emerged: tenant farming and sharecropping. • Cotton was Georgia’s most important crop. • Continuous growing of tobacco and cotton ruined the soil on many farms. • Railroads expanded across the state. • Savannah and Brunswick became important shipping ports. • Atlanta began its growth into an important business center.

  11. Reconstruction Ends • 1870 – Georgia readmitted into Union • Ratified 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments • Statewide system of public schools 2) 1872 – amnesty granted 3) Freedman’s Bureau abolished 4) Rutherford B. Hayes elected President 1877 5) Reconstruction officially ends

  12. Most Important Which Reconstruction plan or Amendment do you think was most important to move the country forward from the Civil War?  Why?  Explain.

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