Reconstruction - Humble Independent School District
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Transcript Reconstruction - Humble Independent School District
Lincoln’s Plans for
Reconstruction
Pardon
Confederate
officials
Form new
governments
Send southern
representatives to
Congress
Freedmen’s Bureau
created to assist
former slaves
Presidential
Reconstruction
President Andrew
Johnson’s Plan: (based
on Lincoln’s)
Ratify 13th Amendment
Accept supreme power of
U.S. government
Amnesty (forgiveness) to
southerners
Return property
Each state had to write a new
constitution: declare
secession illegal & abolish
slavery
Congressional Reaction
Radical Republicans:
Nickname for party members leading
Congress
Believed the federal gov’t should play
an active role in remaking South
Goals:
Destroy South’s old ruling class
Make it a place of small farms, free
schools, respect for labor, & political
equality for all
Black codes –laws passed in the South
to limit the freedom of former slaves
Northerners suspected Southerners were trying to
bring back the “Old South” (slavery)
Congressional Legislation
13th Amendment
Abolished slavery
Civil Rights Act of 1866
All persons born in the U.S.
are citizens
All citizens are entitled to
equal rights
14th Amendment
All born in the U.S. are
citizens
All citizens granted “equal
protection of the law”
Congressional Legislation
Reconstruction Acts
South=5 military districts
Voting for all adult males
Ratify 14th Amendment
15th Amendment
Cannot deny a person right
to vote on race, color, or
previous condition of
servitude
1870
1866
1868
1868
1868
1870
1868
1868
1870
1870
1868
1870
Date readmitted to the Union
Boundary of military
district
Presidential Impeachment
Johnson tried to block
Congressional
Reconstruction
Congress passed Tenure of
Office Act
President cannot fire govt.
employees without permission
Johnson suspended Sec. of War
& tried to hire a new one
House of Representatives
impeached the President for
wrongdoing against public
office
Avoided removal in the Senate by
one vote
African Americans in
Congress
During Reconstruction,
more than 600 African
American served in state
legislatures
14 U.S. Congressman from
Southern states
Hiram Revels-1st African
American to serve as a
senator
During the war he was a
minister in a church &
recruited blacks to fight for the
Union
From left to right: Senator Hiram R. Revels and
Representatives Benjamin S. Turner, Robert D. De Large,
Josiah T. Walls, Jefferson H. Long, Joseph H. Rainey, and
Robert Brown Elliot.
Contract System of
Labor
Former slaves worked on
plantations as paid workers
with contracts
Pros –
Chose who to work for
Families could not be split
up
Cons –
Wages were poor
Workers cheated
Punished for breaking
contracts
Sharecropping
Most Americans (mostly freed
people) could not afford land
Tenant farming
Rent land to grow crops
Sharecropper
Worker who rents land from
the land owner
Pays for seeds/supplies with
profits from sales
Sharecropper cycle
Forced to grow cash crops &
buy food on credit
When crops were sold profit
didn’t pay debt, so debt
carried over to the next year
Fighting Reconstruction
Groups like the White
League and Ku Klux Klan
Secret southern group that did
not want African Americans
to have rights
Their objective was to
restore Democratic control &
keep African Americans
powerless
Attacked African-Americans
targeting those that owned land
or were prosperous
Beat people, burned homes,
lynched people
The New-“Old South"
About 500,000 freedmen voted in the South
during the 1868 election
Most freedmen supported Grant
Women were angered by the 15th
Amendment
Uneducated former slaves received the
right to vote, but educated white women
did not
Imposed poll taxes & literacy tests to
restrict African Americans from
voting
Grant urged Congress to pass an anti-Klan
bill to stop the terrorizing of AfricanAmericans
Bill led to a more fair election in 1872
Grant's Bad Decisions
Scandals within Grant’s
administration hurt the
Republican Party
Grant put unqualified
army friends & his wife’s
relatives in government
positions
Panic of 1873
Many powerful Eastern banks
made bad loans, ran out of
money, & shut down
Stock market temporarily closed &
RR industry suffered
Impact of the Panic of 1873
Run on the bank (1873)
More than 18,000 companies
shut down & thousands lost
jobs
Republicans lost power due to
public blame
Democrats won victories in
1874 & tried to restore the
old south
Rutherford B. Hayes wins
Election of 1876
Republicans & Democrats claimed
victory in 3 southern states
Compromise of 1877-solved the
election & gave concessions to
both sides in the South
Opening the Great Plains
The frontier was the sparsely
populated area on the western
side of the nation
The Great Plains was area
stretched from the Missouri
River to the Rocky Mountains
Transcontinental RR carried
resources of the west to markets
in the East & brought miners,
ranchers and farmers west to
develop the western resources
further
The U.S. government forced the
Native Americans on the Great
Plains onto Reservations
Growth & Expansion
Homestead Act
Government encouraged western
settlement
160 acres of free land to anyone
who agreed to live on the land
for 5 years & improve it
Morrill Act
Federal land to fund public
colleges that taught agriculture &
mechanical arts
Dawes Act
Encourage Native Americans to
give up their traditional cultures
and become farmers
Sent children to schools to be
“Americanized”
Post Reconstruction
South
Restrict the rights of African
Americans when they passed
laws restricting their freedoms
Literacy tests & poll taxes
Prevent blacks from voting
Jim Crow laws forced separation
of white & black people in
public places
Segregation through separate
schools, restrooms, & seating
Court case upheld these laws
by declaring them “separate but
equal” & not a violation of the
14th Amendment