Reconstruction
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Transcript Reconstruction
List three ways you would
rebuild the South after the
Civil War.
Instructional Objectives:
Explain the concepts of Reconstruction
Identify the life of African Americans after
the Civil War
Explain the Fourteenth Amendment and who
it gave rights to.
Chapter 18
Reconstruction
Reconstruction Begins
Occurred between 1865 to
1877
Readmitting the
Confederate states to the
Union
Lincoln promised no harm
to anyone and charity for
all
Pardoned Confederate
officials
Freedmen’s Bureau
Helped African
Americans by:
Schools
Hospitals
Distributed clothes,
food, and fuel
Andrew Johnson
Lincoln assassinated April,
1865
Johnson believed
Reconstruction was
the Job of the
President
Offered pardons to
white southerners
In return, they had to
pledge loyalty to
America
Rebuilding Conflicts
South formed governments much like they had before
the War
Black codes restricted African American rights in the
South
Congress decided which Southern States should have
representation
Congress taking action into their own hands
Civil Rights Act
Civil Rights Act of 1866
Give all US born people
(except Native
Americans) full
citizenship
Johnson’s reaction:
Johnson felt groups
would conspire against
the rest of America
Fourteenth Amendment
Republicans unhappy with Johnson’s veto, so they
proposed the Fourteenth Amendment.
All people born in the US were citizens and had the
same rights
Granted “equal protection of the laws.”
Did not establish black suffrage
Any state that kept African Americans from voting lost
representations in Congress.
Johnson refused support it.
Reconstruction Act of 1867
Moderate and Radical Republicans joined sides.
Congress now controlled reconstruction
Southern states could rejoin the Union if:
They approve state constitutions that gave vote rights to
all
Ratify the 14th Amendment
Johnson Impeached
Congress was angered at
Johnson and his
Reconstruction efforts.
House voted to impeach
Johnson for improper
conduct while in office.
Strengthened Congress’s role
in Reconstruction
Johnson was acquitted by a
single vote.
Life after Slavery
Slaves left plantations for:
Searching for families
Looking for economic opportunity
To find family members
Because they could
Freedmen’s Bureau helped to united families
Freedmen’s schools
Taught in warehouses, billiard rooms, former slave
markets, churches, and houses
150,000 students attended 3,000 schools by 1869
White racists protested the schools
Work
Some freedmen returned to
plantations as waged workers
earning a living.
Got to choose of who to work for
and how much they would get
paid
Was called the Contract system.
Contracts with each plantation
owner
Plantation owners would violate
the contracts and workers would
be punished for leaving.
Land is given to a
sharecropper in
exchange for half the
crops
Buy food and
clothing on credit
Settle up the debt
To pay debt,
sharecropper
must give more
next time
Plant and Harvest
Crops
Crops are sold by
landowner and
Sharecropper gets
half the earnings
Ku Klux Klan
Formed in 1866
Goals: Keep Democratic control of the South and keep
former slaves powerless
The Klan attacked African Americans and Republicans
Little protection for victims
Served the Democratic Party and kept Republicans
away from polling places. Increased Democratic Power
The Next President
Election of 1868.
The winner was….
Ulysses S. Grant
Fifteenth Amendment
Stated that people could not be stopped from voting
“on account of race, color, or previous condition of
servitude.”
Did not apply to white women. Lead to Suffragettes
like Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Until this point, African-Americans could not vote in
16 states
Grant vs. the Klan
Grant wanted stricter laws against the Klan.
Congress approved the anti-Klan bill.
The result was Federal Marshalls arresting thousands
of Klansmen.
Attacks on African-American voted declined and
Grant won his second term.
Political Scandal
Grant’s administration was
full of corruption
He appointed army friends
and his wife’s relatives to
office
Split the Republican party
Tough reconstruction laws
were not getting passed
Panic of 1873
A 5 year economic depression in America.
The Republican party was blamed
People no longer wanted to hear about problems in the
south and lost interest in Reconstruction.
Supreme Court Cases
US vs. Cruikshank: The federal
Government could not punish
individuals who violated the
civil rights of African
Americans.
US vs. Reese: the Court ruled in
favor of white Southerners who
barred African Americans from
voting.
Compromise of 1877
The South would give Rutherford B Hayes the
Presidency under the following conditions:
No more federal troops in the South
Railroad grants
Federal funds for southern projects
Democratic cabinet
Respect African American Civil Rights
Reconstruction governments in the south collapsed.