Chapter 17 Reconstruction
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Transcript Chapter 17 Reconstruction
Chapter 17
Reconstruction
The Politics of Reconstruction
• Each side had catastrophic losses in lives. The Union -360,000 men
and the Confederates - 260,000 men.
• Supremacy of the National Government
• The South was left in total ruin
• Southern whites greatly despised Emancipation.
• Lincoln’s Plan was a gentle and forgiving approach to reconstruction
and only 10% of the population would have to take an oath of
allegiance.
• He vetoed harsher Wade-Davis bill that would have called for 50%
of population taking the oath of allegiance.
• January 1865, General Sherman’s Special Field Order 15 - set aside
the Sea Islands off the Cost of Georgia for freed people.
The Politics of Reconstruction (Continued)
• Following Lincoln’s ideals Johnson
granted amnesty and pardoned many
southerners.
• Conflict with the Radical Republicans
• Radical’s wanted Federal
Reconstruction
• Civil Rights bill, Freedmen’s Bureau
& 14th /15th amendments.
Johnson’s impeachment crisis – lame duck.
By summer of 1868, Alabama, Arkansas,
Florida, Louisiana, North/South Carolina, &
Tennessee had returned to the Union.
The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
• Not trusted by the North
• A traitor to the South
• Tenure of Office Act
• 1867 - Impeachment
Election of 1868 & Woman’s Suffrage
Ulysses S. Grant was the Republican
nominee. Horatio Seymour was the
Democrat’s nominee. Grant won with 26
of the 34 states.
Mississippi, Texas, and Virginia were
readmitted after the ratification of 14th &
15th amendment.
Women’s Suffrage took a huge hit with
the incorporation of “male” in the 14th
amendment.
There was a split in woman suffragists
into the American Woman Suffrage
Association and National Woman
Suffrage Association.
The Meaning of Freedom
• There was no actual set date in which all the slaves were freed.
It was gradual as the news spread.
• Between 1865-70, the African American population of
Southern cities doubled while the White population only
increased by 10%.
• African American families now decided for themselves when
and where the women and children worked.
• The church was the first social institution fully controlled by
African Americans and became a pivotal point in many lives.
The Meaning Of Freedom (Continued)
• The idea of The Freedmen’s
Bureau Act of 1865 (forty acres
and a mule) became an issue of
debate.
• Percy Roberts identified 3 types
of “systems for hire” in a 1866
writing; money wages, share
wages, & sharecropping.
• Sharecropping dominated the
southern economy with 80% of
the land in the black belt(1880)
• African America political activity
becoming a large Republican
voting bloc.
Southern Politics and Society
• One key component of Reconstruction - the establishment of
Republican party in the South to complete the two-party system.
• Federal troops were needed to secure the Republican governments
in the south & their supporters. But by 1877, Democrats had
regained political control of all former Confederate states.
• There were 3 groups of Southern Republicans: African Americans,
Carpetbaggers, and scalawags.
•
• Economics
• Between 1868-72, the southern railroad was rebuilt and +3,000
miles of new track were laid.
• Black and Whites worked together.
Southern Politics and Society- White Resistance &
“Redemption”
• The Ku Klux Klan launched a
terrorist campaign against
Reconstruction governments and
local leaders.
• Supported the Democratic Party.
• Ku Klux Klan Act of April 1871 &
Civil Rights Act of 1875.
• Slaughterhouse cases of 1873, US v.
Reese (1876), and US v. Cruikshank
(1876).
• “King Cotton” began to grow in the
post war south, but it soon created
endless cycles of debt.
Southern Politics and Society
Reconstruction The North
• By 1873, American’s industrial
production had grown 75% over the
1865 level.
• The Pacific Railway Act of 1862
• May 10, 1869, Leland Stanford
hammers the last spike and finishes
the 1st transcontinental railroad.
• Railroad paved the way for mass
growth and expansion.
• Liberal Republicans
• Election of 1872, Grant defeats
Greeley
• Depression of 1873, the result of
commercial overexpansion, and drop
in cotton prices.
Reconstruction The North – The Election of 1876