Reconstruction
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Transcript Reconstruction
Reconstruction
Chapter 16
Post war Problems
Politically – How do you put the nation back
together?
Economically – How do you keep the nation
from utter economic ruin?
Social – How do you ease the hard feelings of
the populous?
– What will happen to the 4 million slaves that are now
free?
– What will the future hold for all people?
Changes during the War
1862 – Pacific Railway Act gave huge
grants of land to build the transcontinental
railroad
Land grants and federal subsidies were
major source of funding
Abraham Lincoln’s Plan
Ten Percent Plan
– 10% of the 1860 voters swear allegiance
– Accept 13th Amendment
– All except high-ranking civil and military
leaders could be pardoned
Bring the South back in as soon as
possible
Lincoln pocket vetoed the WadeDavis Bill
Wade-Davis Bill
July 1864 – created by Ben Wade (OH) &
Henry Davis (MD)
1. Majority of white male citizens participate
in creation of new government
2. To vote or be a constitutional conventions
delegate men had to take an “iron-clad”
oath
3. All Confederate officers ranking higher
than a Lieutenant and civil officers would
be considered non-citizens
The Defeated South
Many former slaves worked on abandoned
plantations leased to Northern investors
Sherman had given some 40 acre plots
Congress created the Freedman’s Bureau
– March 1865
– Provided food, medicine, schools/colleges for
freed slaves and white refugees
13th Amendment – abolished slavery
(1865)
Andrew Johnson Background
V.P. only during 2nd term
Compromise to get Democrats to vote for
Lincoln (Republican)
Former War Democrat from Tennessee –
sympathized with fellow white Southerners
and committed to white supremacy
Not the statesman that Lincoln was
Andrew Johnson and Presidential
Reconstruction
Restrict reconstruction to the executive
branch
Restore the Union quickly
Restore property rights to Southerners
who swear allegiance to the Union
Johnson’s Actions
Granted amnesty to most Southern states
while Congress was not in session
Pardoned many of the political elite in the
South if they swore allegiance to the Union
High confederate officials, former federal
officials, and West Point/Annapolis grads
initially were not pardoned
Ex-Confederates with taxable property >
$20,000 personal appeal to President for
voter rights
Three Factions
Northern Democrats = supported Johnson
didn’t want racial equality
Conservative Republicans = wanted
limited federal role in the Reconstruction
Radical Republicans = wanted to
transform the South
The Radical Republican Vision
Punish the South
Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner
Remake the South more like the North
Wanted land redistribution to former
slaves
Wanted to exclude CSA officers and
soldiers from political offices
Favored black suffrage and rights of freed
people
Congressional Reconstruction
Angry at Johnson’s plan and Southern black
codes, the Senate proposed stronger legislation:
Civil Rights Act of 1865
-Extended the power of Freedmen’s Bureau
-Vetoed by Johnson and overridden by Congress
14th Amendment (1867)
-Defined citizenship and
protected that right!
-Punished former Confederates
15th Amendment (1870)– right to vote regardless of
race, color or former servitude
Congressional Reconstruction
Military Reconstruction Act of 1867 (First
Reconstruction Act)
-Passed over Johnson’s veto
-Divided South into 5 military districts
-Each run by a UNION military general with
dictatorial powers
To be “readmitted” to the Union:
-States drafted Constitution granting black
suffrage
(in other words; they had to ratify the 14th & 15th
Amendments)
3 Steps Towards Impeachement
Final Straw =Tenure of Office Act
Sec. of War Edwin Stanton
One vote short of conviction
The Election of 1868
Ulysses S. Grant – Republican
Horatio Seymour - Democrat
“Waving the Bloody Shirt” – Republican
tactic of reminding Northern voters of
Union casualties
Blaming the
South & Democrats
for the war
Moving About
Black Codes – laws to restrict the freedom
of blacks
Radical Republicans very upset by these
After Grant’s election he wanted to
legalize voting for African Americans
Result:
15th Amendment
White Resistance and
“Redemption”
Re-establishing white supremacy & social order
Redeemers = Conservative Democrats who
gained control of southern states
Violence & Intimidation: KKK
– Ku Klux Klan Act
The African-American Family
Society based family and church
Males took on more family authority but
women continued to work outside the
home
Allowed to practice religion without
interference
Education – Freedman’s Bureau taught
many
First Black colleges established
The Origins of African-American
Politics
Primary goals: equality before the law and
guarantee of suffrage (right to vote)
Five states had more blacks than whites
Political organizations form
New leaders emerge and get elected
Prevented from voting by
– Threats & intimidation
– Poll taxes, grandfather clauses, literacy tests
Land and Labor after Slavery
Spread of sharecropping and tenant
farming
Most wanted to be self-sufficient farmers
Not a real change from slavery and in
some ways worse
Southern Reconstruction
Major issue: how to get things back to normal
Confirmed the federal government was supreme
over individual states
Carpetbaggers & Scalawags
– Whites who support republicans
Grant Scandals
Credit Mobilier – stealing Union Pacific
Railroad – Congress investigates & is
bribed to keep quiet
Whiskey Ring – not paying tax, tax
collectors being paid off
Indian trading posts – Sec. of War being
extorted to allow man to remain in charge
Speculation in the gold market – James
Fiske & Jay Gould
Weakening Equality
Slaughterhouse cases: said 14th
Amendment only applied to national
citizenship – not state citizenship
U.S. v. Reese & U.S. v. Cruikshank – only
applied to discrimination by the states
The Age of Capital
Rapid Industrialization – railroad boom
Rise of monopolies & big business
Mining & Oil
Reconstructing the States: A Mixed
Record
Civil Rights Act of 1875 – outlawed racial
discrimination in public places
Idealism fades – Democrats gain strength
Republican vision of modern South does
not become reality
Cotton prices spiral downward – South
becomes an impoverished region
Liberal Republicans and the
Election of 1872
Old radicals die off
Many appalled by corruption of the party
Liberal Republicans call for return to
limited government
Propose Civil Service reform
The Depression of 1873
Longest Depression in history to this point
Clashes between labor and management
High unemployment, falling prices on
goods
The Electoral Crisis of 1876
Samuel Tilden – Democrat
Rutherford B. Hayes – Republican & war hero
Disputed electoral votes
Electoral Commission
Compromise of 1877
Hayes – president
End of military presence in South
Appoint a Democrat to his cabinet
Spend federal money on internal
improvements in the South
Other
Chinese Exclusion Act – prohibited Chinese
immigration to the U.S. for 10 years
Thomas Nast – political cartoonist –
Harper’s Weekly