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To Begin…

To Begin…. Use deductive reasoning to determine the answer. President Lincoln was reluctant to emancipate the slaves in the first year of the Civil War because He feared that freeing the slaves would bring England and France into the war Congress was opposed to emancipation

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  1. To Begin… Use deductive reasoning to determine the answer. President Lincoln was reluctant to emancipate the slaves in the first year of the Civil War because • He feared that freeing the slaves would bring England and France into the war • Congress was opposed to emancipation • He knew that a proclamation about slavery would only further alienate the South • He feared that emancipation would drive the border states out of the Union • He had always been opposed to the abolitionists in his party

  2. Topic 4: Effects of the Civil War

  3. When finish, please turn in your quiz and remain quiet until your peers finish. Quiz Time 

  4. Reconstruction Was Reconstruction a success or a failure? 11/4

  5. Effects of the war • Political: • Republican majorities in Congress • reasserted federal government • Economic: • new economic policies; • strengthened northern industry and commerce • closer relationship between North and West • Social: • changing roles of women and freed men • 620,000 deaths; 400,000 wounded

  6. The Post-War Situation • North • want to continue economic progress that began during the war • Republicans believe they have a political mandate • Some believed that Southern society needed to be completely revamped

  7. The Post-War Situation • South • economy and infrastructure destroyed • ego bruised • feel exploited • Carpetbaggers • Scalawags • Southern whites desire to return to pre-war prominence • freedmen looking for equal rights and opportunity

  8. What do we do now? • Reconstruction: the period from 1865-1877 that attempted to politically, socially, and economically rebuild the nation. • Major Questions: • What is the place of 4 million newly freed slaves in society? Do they need help “adjusting”? • Should the former states be treated as if never left or as conquered territory? • Who has the authority to decide these questions?

  9. Your Reconstruction Plan • Working in a small group, determine and explain your ideological approach to Reconstruction. • Do you want to punish or forgive? • Do you want the process to be expedient or thorough? • Keeping your ideological approach in mind, develop the details of your plan. • Who is in charge of the Reconstruction process? • What is the process for reintegrating Southern states back into the Union? • What will be done to Southerners who rebelled, especially their political/military leaders? • If and how will the South be rebuilt? • How will newly freed slaves be integrated into society? Will specific services and protections be provided? What kind?

  10. Reconstruction Plans • Presidential Plans • Ideology – quick and painless • Lincoln’s 10% Plan (1863) • 10% of voters had to pledge allegiance to the Union and to uphold emancipation. • Temporary exclusion of Confederates • Johnson’s Plan (1865) • Lowered pledge % • Disenfranchised ex-Confederates (but some could be pardoned) • Ratify 13th Amendment • Congressional Plans • Ideology – thorough and punishing • Wade-Davis Bill (1864) • 50% of voters had to pledge • Abolition of slavery • Permanent exclusion of Confederates • Radical Reconstruction (Act of 1867) • Divided South into 5 military districts • Ratify 14th Amendment • Extend suffrage to African Americans

  11. Reconstruction Politics Cont. • Constitutional Amendments • 13 (1865) • 14 (1868) • 15 (1870)

  12. Reconstruction Politics Cont. • Constitutional Amendments • 13 (1865) • 14 (1868) • 15 (1870) • Johnson’s Impeachment • Tension with Congress • Tenure of Office Act • Narrow acquittal

  13. …To End • Please craft a thesis statement for the following question: Assess the accuracy of the statement -- “Ultimately, the Civil War reduced sectional antagonism and made the United States truly ‘one nation’.”

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