A Brief Overview of Georgia Voting Rights History Milestones and Millstones: Exploring the Disenfranchisement of Minority Voters

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "A Brief Overview of Georgia Voting Rights History Milestones and Millstones: Exploring the Disenfranchisement of Minority Voters"

Transcription

1 A Brief Overview of Georgia Voting Rights History Milestones and Millstones: Exploring the Disenfranchisement of Minority Voters By Professor L. Lynn Hogue Georgia State University College of Law Originally prepared for the State Bar of Georgia 2006 Annual Meeting, June 2, 2006

2 I want to acknowledge extensive reliance on Laughlin McDonald's excellent history A Voting Rights Odyssey: Black Enfranchisement in Georgia (Cambridge University Press, 2003) for the details of Georgia's efforts to suppress minority voting. 2

3 Civics Class version of Milestones in Voting Rights 1776 When this country announced its independence from Britain, voting rights were based on property ownership. This typically meant that those voting were white males over the age of 21 of Protestant religion In the newly drafted Constitution, states were given the power to set voting mandates and most were still favorable to white males who owned property Many states had dropped religion and property ownership as requirements for voting and with such a large percentage of the population at the polls, political parties were beginning to develop The 14th Amendment recognizes African Americans as citizens, giving them the right to vote. However, state officials continue attempts to deny this right African Americans were given the right to vote in the 15th Amendment. It prohibited any state or local government from denying that right Wyoming becomes the first state to recognize women's right to vote and provide for it in a state constitution Voting power is expanded with 17th Amendment, calling for the popular election of U.S. Senators The 19th Amendment was added to the Constitution, giving women across the nation the right to vote Congress recognizes Native Americans as citizens. However, it wasn't until 1947 that all states granted them the right to vote The 24th Amendment declares that no person should be denied the right to vote because they cannot pay a "poll tax." 1965 An amendment to the Voting Rights Act bans the use of literacy tests, poll taxes and other obstacles designed to keep people from voting. Adapted from: 3

4 An Annotated, Anecdotal Timeline of Georgia Voting Rights History At the conclusion of the Civil War, three amendments are added to the federal Constitution: the Thirteenth (1865) abolishing slavery, the Fourteenth (1868), inter alia conferring citizenship on newly freed slaves, and the Fifteenth (1870) forbidding discrimination on the basis of race in the exercise of the franchise. All three amendments include power for Congress to "enforce" the amendments' provisions "by appropriate legislation." 1870 and 1871 Congress passed three Enforcement Acts under its enforcement authority to address efforts by whites in the south to deny blacks the right to vote. The first penalized anyone who interfered with another person's right to vote. The second provided for the surveillance of congressional elections by federal marshals and supervisors. The third, the Ku Klux Klan Act, outlawed conspiracy, disguise and intimidation which were seen as central to terrorist Klan activities. Millstones in Voting Rights 1874 Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. 162 (1874) The right to vote is solely a product of state law. The right to vote was not part of the privileges and immunities of citizenship, and States were free to deny the franchise on any basis except race. Women, although citizens, could not vote unless state law conferred that right on them United States v. Reese, 92 U.S. 214 (1975) The Fifteenth Amendment does not confer the right of suffrage upon anyone; states may continue to set age, property, education and other restrictions on groups. It only prevents the States or the United States from denying the vote to anyone on account of race. Reese dismissed an indictment against a tax collector for refusing to accept a capitation or poll tax (generally defined as a tax on a person without regard to his property, employment, or occupation) because of the taxpayer's race. As a result, the victim could not meet the qualification for voting because he hadn't paid his poll tax. Racial denials of the franchise that arose from denials of collateral matters relating to qualification for voting were not within the reach of the Fifteenth Amendment. The decision largely eviscerated the first enforcement act. 4

5 United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 541 (1875) The third enforcement act was unconstitutional as applied to the lynching of two blacks. Punishment of crime was the province of the state; neither the Fourteenth nor the Fifteenth Amendments were intended to alter this distribution of power in a republic with dual federalism. The indictment was insufficient to state a denial of federal rights. Cruikshank portended only limited enforceability of the Ku Klux Klan Act. 5

6 A Time Line of the Georgia Experience Constitution of Georgia of 1777, Art. IX The franchise is limited to "male white inhabitants, of the age of twenty-one years." Constitution of Georgia of 1789, Art. IV The franchise is extended to "citizens and inhabitants" but neither slaves nor free blacks are regarded as "citizens" and thus are ineligible to vote. Bryan v. Walton, 14 Ga. 185 (1853) Even free persons of color were part of "a race of Pagan slaves" for whom "the social and civil degradation, resulting from the taint of blood adheres to the descendants of Ham in this country, like the poisoned tunic of Nessus; that nothing but an Act of Assembly can purify, by the salt of its grace, the bitter fountain -- the 'darkling sea.'" (Lumpkin, J.) Georgia Code of 1861 By law, free blacks were expressly denied citizenship: [t]he free person of color is entitled to no right of citizenship, except such as are specially given by law. His status differs from that of the slave in this: No master+ having dominion over him he is entitled to the free use of his liberty, labor and property, except so far as he is restrained by law. ( 1612) and by law it was a crime to teach "any slave, negro, or free person of color, to read or write" or to provide them with books or writing material ( 4496, 4500) Constitution of Georgia of 1865 Blacks are excluded from voting and office holding (Art. V, Sec. I, para. I) and regulated by Black Codes, or laws applying only to African Americans that exclude them from voting, jury service, education and marrying outside their race ["persons of color" include "all negroes, mulattoes, mestizoes, and their descendants, having one-eighth negro, or African blood, in their veins" Ga. Laws 1866, p. 239] 6

7 First, Second and Third Reconstruction Acts (1867) Black voters are registered under military supervision. Approximately 200,000 new voters are added to the rolls by the registrars, "nearly half of them black." (Laughlin McDonald, A Voting Rights Odyssey) Constitution of Georgia of 1868 Assures black citizenship and male suffrage but does not expressly guarantee blacks the right to hold office. Ku Klux Klan is organized in Georgia in 1868 "During its early years, the Klan functioned essentially as the terrorist wing of the Democratic Party, with its main purpose being to drive the Republicans from political power by every means possible." (Laughlin McDonald, A Voting Rights Odyssey) Georgia is readmitted to the Union 1868 contingent of ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment (July 21, 1868). Twenty-eight black members of the legislature are expelled in 1868 because they are ineligible under state law to hold office. Congress restores Georgia to military supervision. Georgia ratifies the Fourteenth Amendment a second time and the Fifteenth Amendment for the first time leading to readmission to the Union again (July 15, 1870) Akerman Law (Ga. Laws 1870, p. 63) prohibits challenging or hindering voters at the polls and abolishes the poll tax Redemptionist Democrats repeal the Akerman voter challenge law, reinstitute the poll tax, abolish some county elections and substitute a government appointed by the governor, and abolish ward elections in Atlanta. Local school board elections are replaced by grand jury appointments. Jury service was limited to "upright and intelligent persons," a standard that was used to exclude blacks. Georgia Constitutional Convention of 1877 Convention leader Robert Toombs: "Give us a convention, and I will fix it so that the people shall rule and the Negro shall never be heard from." 7

8 Constitution of Georgia of 1877 Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877 Southern Democrats agree to support Republican Rutherford B. Hays for President in return for an end to Reconstruction and the withdrawal of federal troops. Williams v. Mississippi, 170 U.S. 213 (1898) Upheld the constitutionality of literacy tests and poll taxes and quoting with approval the explanation of racial disenfranchisement measures from Ratliff v. Beale, 74 Miss. 247, 20 So. 865 (1896) Within the field of permissible action under the limitations imposed by the federal constitution, the convention swept the circle of expedients to obstruct the exercise of the franchise by the negro race. By reason of its previous condition of servitude and dependence, this race had acquired or accentuated certain peculiarities of habit, of temperament, and of character, which clearly distinguished it as a race from that of the whites,-a patient, docile people, but careless, landless, and migratory within narrow limits, without forethought, and its criminal members given rather to furtive offenses than to the robust crimes of the whites. Restrained by the federal constitution from discriminating against the negro race, the convention discriminated against its characteristics and the offenses to which its weaker members were prone. A voter, who should move out of his election precinct, though only to an adjoining farm, was declared ineligible until his new residence should have continued for a year. Payment of taxes for two years at or before a date fixed many months anterior to an election is another requirement, and one well calculated to disqualify the careless. Burglary, theft, arson, and obtaining money under false pretenses were declared to be disqualifications, while robbery and murder and other crimes in which violence was the principal ingredient were not. 8

9 Giles v. Harris, 189 U.S. 475 (1903) Upheld an elaborate and acknowledged scheme to disenfranchise blacks from voting: The allegations of the bill may be summed up as follows: The plaintiff is subject to none of the disqualifications set forth in the Constitution of Alabama and is entitled to vote,-entitled, as the bill plainly means, under the Constitution as it is. He applied in March, 1902, for registration as a voter, and was refused arbitrarily on the ground of his color, together with large numbers of other duly qualified negroes, while all white men were registered. The same thing was done all over the state. Under 187 of article 8 of the Alabama Constitution, persons registered before January 1, 1903, remain electors for life unless they become disqualified by certain crimes, etc., while after that date severer tests come into play which would exclude, perhaps, a large part of the black race. Therefore by the refusal the plaintiff and the other negroes excluded were deprived, not only of their vote at an election which has taken place since the bill was filed, but of the permanent advantage incident to registration before The white men generally are registered for good under the easy test, and the black men are likely to be kept out in the future as in the past. This refusal to register the blacks was part of a general scheme to disfranchise them, to which the defendants and the state itself, according to the bill, were parties. * * * If the conspiracy and the intent exist, a name on a piece of paper will not defeat them. Unless we are prepared to supervise the voting in that state by officers of the court, it seems to us that all that the plaintiff could get from equity would be an empty form. Apart from damages to the individual, relief from a great political wrong, if done, as alleged, by the people of a state and the state itself, must be given by them or by the legislative and political department of the government of the United States. Atlanta Race Riot, September 1906 The Disenfranchising Act, Ga. Laws 1908, p. 27 Georgia adopts a literacy test for voting, the last southern state to do so. The law contains other 9

10 provisions also intended to prevent blacks from voting, see South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, (1966) (the 1908 Georgia law was "specifically designed to prevent Negroes from voting.") The White Primary Nixon v. Herndon, 273 U.S. 536 (1927) Nixon v. Condon, 286 U.S. 73 (1932) Grovey v. Townsend, 295 U.S. 45 (1935) Terry v. Adams, 345 U.S. 461 (1953) King v. Chapman, 62 F.Supp. 639 (M.D.Ga. 1945), aff'd sub nom. Chapman v. King, 154 F.2d 460 (5th Cir. 1946) Breedlove v. Suttles, 302 U.S. 277 (1937) Georgia's poll tax is upheld: "[t]he payment of a poll tax as a prerequisite to voting is a familiar and reasonable regulation long enforced in many states and for more than a century in Georgia." at The Georgia poll tax was repealed in 1945 [Ga. Laws 1945, p. 129] and outlawed in the Twenty-fourth Amendment (1964) for federal elections. Subsequently, in Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections, 383 U.S. 663 (1966), the Supreme Court overruled Breedlove and held the poll tax illegal for state elections as well. The County Unit System "Whatever its historic justification, the county unit system in modern times served two fundamental purposes. One was to ensure control of statewide offices by the rural counties with a minority of the state's population. The other, which had become more critical since the abolition of the white primary, was to contain the black vote in the urban areas of the state." (Laughlin McDonald, A Voting Rights Odyssey) Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.S. 368 (1963) Held the county unit system was unconstitutional because it denied "equality of voting power" required by the norm of "one person, one vote." Majority vote requirement (1963) Voting Rights Act of

African American History Policy Timeline 1700-Present

African American History Policy Timeline 1700-Present African American History Policy Timeline 1700-Present 1711 Great Britain s Queen Anne overrules a Pennsylvania colonial law prohibiting slavery. 1735 South Carolina passes laws requiring enslaved people

More information

Reconstruction & Voting of African American Men. Jennifer Reid-Lamb Pioneer Middle School Plymouth-Canton Schools. Summer 2012

Reconstruction & Voting of African American Men. Jennifer Reid-Lamb Pioneer Middle School Plymouth-Canton Schools. Summer 2012 Reconstruction & Voting of African American Men Jennifer Reid-Lamb Pioneer Middle School Plymouth-Canton Schools Summer 2012 An 1867 wood engraving by A.R. Waud found in Harper s weekly titled "The first

More information

Goal 1. Analyze the political, economic, and social impact of Reconstruction on the nation and identify the reasons why Reconstruction came to an end.

Goal 1. Analyze the political, economic, and social impact of Reconstruction on the nation and identify the reasons why Reconstruction came to an end. Reconstruction Goal 1 Analyze the political, economic, and social impact of Reconstruction on the nation and identify the reasons why Reconstruction came to an end. Essential Questions: How are civil liberties

More information

Chapter 16 - Reconstruction

Chapter 16 - Reconstruction Chapter 16 - Reconstruction Section Notes Rebuilding the South The Fight over Reconstruction Reconstruction in the South Quick Facts The Reconstruction Amendments Hopes Raised and Denied Chapter 16 Visual

More information

Radicals in Control. Guide to Reading

Radicals in Control. Guide to Reading Radicals in Control Main Idea Radical Republicans were able to put their version of Reconstruction into action. Key Terms black codes, override, impeach 1865 First black codes passed Guide to Reading Reading

More information

SSUSH10 THE STUDENT WILL IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION.

SSUSH10 THE STUDENT WILL IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION. SSUSH10 THE STUDENT WILL IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION. SSUSH10: The student will identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. a. Compare and

More information

End of the Civil War and Reconstruction

End of the Civil War and Reconstruction End of the Civil War and Reconstruction Answer these questions somewhere in your notes: What does the term "reconstruction" mean? Why does the country need it after the Civil War? The Reconstruction plans

More information

SLIDE 1 Chapter 13: Reconstruction of Georgia and the South

SLIDE 1 Chapter 13: Reconstruction of Georgia and the South SLIDE 1 Chapter 13: Reconstruction of Georgia and the South 1863 1877 Racial prejudice, conflicts in government, and lingering bad feelings about the Civil War hurt attempts to rebuild the South and guarantee

More information

Chapter 17 - Reconstruction

Chapter 17 - Reconstruction Chapter 17 - Reconstruction Section Notes Rebuilding the South The Fight over Reconstruction Reconstruction in the South Quick Facts The Reconstruction Amendments Hopes Raised and Denied Chapter 17 Visual

More information

Magruder s American Government

Magruder s American Government Presentation Pro Magruder s American Government C H A P T E R 6 Voters and Voter Behavior 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. C H A P T E R 6 Voters and Voter Behavior SECTION 1 The Right to Vote SECTION 2 Voter

More information

10/25/2018. Major Battles. Cold Harbor Battles include: On Jan. 1, 1863 Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation. Gettysburg- turning point

10/25/2018. Major Battles. Cold Harbor Battles include: On Jan. 1, 1863 Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation. Gettysburg- turning point Major Battles Battles include: Bull run Shiloh Antietam Fredericksburg On Jan. 1, 1863 Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation Freed slaves in rebel states Encouraged freedmen to join the Army Gettysburg-

More information

Magruder s American Government

Magruder s American Government Presentation Pro Magruder s American Government C H A P T E R 6 Voters and Voter Behavior 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. The History of Voting Rights The Framers of the Constitution purposely left the power

More information

How did Radical Republicans use the freedmen to punish the South? What policies were implemented to keep African Americans from voting?

How did Radical Republicans use the freedmen to punish the South? What policies were implemented to keep African Americans from voting? Regents Review Reconstruction Key Questions How did the approaches to Reconstruction differ? How did Radical Republicans use the freedmen to punish the South? Why does Andrew Johnson get impeached? What

More information

12.12 Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. By Jackie Suarez, Joanne Kim, Kaitlynn Barbosa, Chenith Say, and Giselle Morales Period 5

12.12 Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. By Jackie Suarez, Joanne Kim, Kaitlynn Barbosa, Chenith Say, and Giselle Morales Period 5 12.12 Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments By Jackie Suarez, Joanne Kim, Kaitlynn Barbosa, Chenith Say, and Giselle Morales Period 5 Amendment XIV Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United

More information

The Civil War: Reconstruction

The Civil War: Reconstruction The Civil War: Reconstruction The economy in the North boomed as factories ran non-stop to meet the demands of the war. In the South, the economy collapsed. Their money became worthless and people were

More information

Creating America (Survey)

Creating America (Survey) Creating America (Survey) Chapter 18: Reconstruction, 1865-1877 Section 1: Rebuilding the Union Main Idea: During Reconstruction, the president and Congress fought over how to rebuild the South. Reconstruction,

More information

Highlights: The Evolution of Voting Rights and their Impact on Political Participation SS.7.C.3.7

Highlights: The Evolution of Voting Rights and their Impact on Political Participation SS.7.C.3.7 Highlights: The Evolution of Voting Rights and their Impact on Political Participation SS.7.C.3.7 Analyze the impact of the 13 th, 14 th, 15 th, 19 th, 24 th, and 26 th amendments on participation of minority

More information

Reconstruction

Reconstruction Reconstruction 1865-1876 WHAT IS RECONSTRUCTION? A rebuilding of the South after the Civil War between 1865-1877 Re = again, Construct = build to build again Post-war problems: NORTH 800,000 union soldiers

More information

Reconstruction

Reconstruction Reconstruction 1864-1877 The South after the War Property losses The value of farms and plantations declined steeply and suffered from neglect and loss of workers. The South s transportation network was

More information

CHAPTER 15 - RECONSTRUCTION. APUSH Mr. Muller

CHAPTER 15 - RECONSTRUCTION. APUSH Mr. Muller CHAPTER 15 - RECONSTRUCTION APUSH Mr. Muller Aim: How does the nation start to rebuild? Do Now: Though slavery was abolished, the wrongs of my people were not ended. Though they were not slaves, they were

More information

Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South ( ) Section 2 Radicals in Control

Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South ( ) Section 2 Radicals in Control Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 2 Radicals in Control Rate your agreement with the following statement: The system of checks and balances prevents any branch of government

More information

Presentation Pro. American Government CHAPTER 6 Voters and Voter Behavior

Presentation Pro. American Government CHAPTER 6 Voters and Voter Behavior Presentation Pro 1 American Government CHAPTER 6 Voters and Voter Behavior 1 1 CHAPTER 6 Voters and Voter Behavior 2 SECTION 1 The Right to Vote SECTION 2 Voter Qualifications SECTION 3 Suffrage and Civil

More information

Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 2

Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 2 Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 2 Objectives 1. Identify the four different ways by which the Constitution may be formally changed. 2. Explain how the formal amendment process illustrates the principles

More information

Reconstruction: A Presentation based on the Georgia Standards of Excellence (GSE) Objectives for High School History Students

Reconstruction: A Presentation based on the Georgia Standards of Excellence (GSE) Objectives for High School History Students Reconstruction: 1865-1877 A Presentation based on the Georgia Standards of Excellence (GSE) Objectives for High School History Students Reconstruction After the war, the South needed to be rebuilt physically,

More information

UNIT II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes page 3. PART II: RECONSTRUCTION 6. When was and what was Reconstruction?

UNIT II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes page 3. PART II: RECONSTRUCTION 6. When was and what was Reconstruction? PART II: RECONSTRUCTION 6. When was and what was Reconstruction? 7. Reconstruction was an attempt to fix the problems of the United States that led to the Civil War. What were the major issues the United

More information

The Collapse of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.3, Pages

The Collapse of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.3, Pages The Collapse of Reconstruction The Americans, Chapter 12.3, Pages 393-401. Opposition to Reconstruction White Southerners who took direct action against African- American participation in government were

More information

Article PAGE 1 Frederick Douglass celebrated in 1870 when African-American men were given the right to vote with the passing of Fifteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. WASHINGTON, D.C. (Achieve3000,

More information

Reconstruction Essay: Document-Based Question

Reconstruction Essay: Document-Based Question Reconstruction Essay: Document-Based Question Historic Background: The period following the Civil War, from 1865 until 1877, was known as Reconstruction. It was a time when the South, physically devastated

More information

The Reconstruction Battle Begins

The Reconstruction Battle Begins The Reconstruction Battle Begins Effects of the Civil War Change in meaning of American nationality Southern cities and farms in ruins Emancipation of slaves The Reconstruction Battle Begins Abraham Lincoln

More information

Unit II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes. PART I: REVIEW OF THE CIVIL WAR What you should have learned in 8 th grade)

Unit II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes. PART I: REVIEW OF THE CIVIL WAR What you should have learned in 8 th grade) Name Per Unit II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes PART I: REVIEW OF THE CIVIL WAR What you should have learned in 8 th grade) 1a)CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR #1: By the eve of the American Civil War, the

More information

AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION

AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION 1 st Amendment AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION 4 th Amendment 13 th Amendment 14 th Amendment 15 th Amendment 16 th Amendment 17 th Amendment 18 th Amendment 19 th Amendment 21 st Amendment CHANGES TO THE

More information

Reconstruction Begins

Reconstruction Begins Reconstruction Begins Lincoln s Ten Percent Plan -Announced in December 1863 -Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction, also known as the Ten-Percent Plan -lenient and forgiving on the South -wanted

More information

Today, you will be able to: Compare the Congress Plans for Reconstruction and explain the Reconstruction Amendments (13 th, 14 th, & 15 th )

Today, you will be able to: Compare the Congress Plans for Reconstruction and explain the Reconstruction Amendments (13 th, 14 th, & 15 th ) Today, you will be able to: Compare the Congress Plans for Reconstruction and explain the Reconstruction Amendments (13 th, 14 th, & 15 th ) Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words on page 127 2. Compare

More information

SSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction.

SSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. SSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. Reconstruction, 1865-1877, involved the rebuilding of the South after the Civil War and readmitting the Confederate states to

More information

Voting Rights League of Women Voters of Mason County May Pat Carpenter-The ALEC Study Group

Voting Rights League of Women Voters of Mason County May Pat Carpenter-The ALEC Study Group Voting Rights League of Women Voters of Mason County May 2016 Pat Carpenter-The ALEC Study Group Essential to the League s Mission Protection of Voting Rights Promotion of Voting Rights Expansion of Voting

More information

Aim: How should the South have been treated at the end of the Civil War?

Aim: How should the South have been treated at the end of the Civil War? RECONSTRUCTION Do Now You have a daughter who has run away from home because she believes you are too strict. You hire a couple of private detectives - it costs thousands of dollars. A couple of months

More information

THE U.S. CIVIL WAR: GALLERY WALK RECONSTRUCTION Education with DocRunning

THE U.S. CIVIL WAR: GALLERY WALK RECONSTRUCTION Education with DocRunning THE U.S. CIVIL WAR: RECONSTRUCTION GALLERY WALK Overview US Civil War Gallery Walk for Reconstruction is a gallery walk of exhibits related to major events and issues during the Reconstruction Era following

More information

SSUSH10: IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION.

SSUSH10: IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION. SSUSH10: IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION. ELEMENT E: Analyze how the Presidential Election of 1876 marked the end of Reconstruction. Overview q The period of Reconstruction

More information

LESSON 12 CIVIL RIGHTS ( , )

LESSON 12 CIVIL RIGHTS ( , ) LESSON 12 CIVIL RIGHTS (456-458, 479-495) UNIT 2 Civil Liberties and Civil Rights ( 10%) RACIAL EQUALITY Civil rights are the constitutional rights of all persons, not just citizens, to due process and

More information

Chapter 18 Reconstruction pg Rebuilding the Union pg One American s Story

Chapter 18 Reconstruction pg Rebuilding the Union pg One American s Story Chapter 18 Reconstruction 1865 1877 pg. 530 551 18 1 Rebuilding the Union pg. 533 537 One American s Story What Pennsylvania congressman became a leader of the Radical Republicans? Reconstruction Begins

More information

Chapter 6:1: Voting and Voting Behavior

Chapter 6:1: Voting and Voting Behavior Chapter 6:1: Voting and Voting Behavior Jos_24:15 And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other

More information

Essential Question: What were the various plans to bring Southern states back into the Union and to protect newly-emancipated slaves?

Essential Question: What were the various plans to bring Southern states back into the Union and to protect newly-emancipated slaves? Essential Question: What were the various plans to bring Southern states back into the Union and to protect newly-emancipated slaves? Reconstruction is the era from 1865 to 1877 when the U.S. government

More information

Reconstruction Timeline

Reconstruction Timeline Reconstruction Timeline 1865 The Civil War ends. Republican President Abraham Lincoln is assassinated. Democrat Andrew Johnson becomes president. 13 th Amendment to the Constitution passes. Congress creates

More information

Reconstruction Practice Test

Reconstruction Practice Test Class: Date: Reconstruction Practice Test Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The main goal of Reconstruction was to a. readmit the former

More information

CHAPTER 6 RECONSTRUCTION AND TRANSITION

CHAPTER 6 RECONSTRUCTION AND TRANSITION CHAPTER 6 RECONSTRUCTION AND TRANSITION Section 1: After the War - Section 2: Presidential Reconstruction - Section 3: Congressional Reconstruction - Section 4: The Constitution of 1890 Chapter 6: Reconstruction

More information

Reconstruction ( )

Reconstruction ( ) Name: Date: Reconstruction (1865-1877) Historical Context The Civil War may have settled some significant national problems, but it also created many more. Slavery was abolished, the country was reunited,

More information

Background Information

Background Information Background Information Following the Civil War, it became apparent that rights would need to be established for the freed slaves. To achieve this, Congress would pass the Reconstruction Amendments. The

More information

Reconstruction Timeline

Reconstruction Timeline Reconstruction Timeline 1865 The Civil War ends. Republican President Abraham Lincoln is assassinated. Democrat Andrew Johnson becomes president. 13 th Amendment to the Constitution passes. Congress creates

More information

Reconstruction DBQ. Question: Why did Congress Reconstruction efforts to ensure equal rights to the freedmen fail?

Reconstruction DBQ. Question: Why did Congress Reconstruction efforts to ensure equal rights to the freedmen fail? Reconstruction DBQ Historical Context The Civil War may have settled some significant national problems, but it also created many more. Slavery was abolished, the country was reunited, and the supremacy

More information

The Politics of Reconstruction

The Politics of Reconstruction The Politics of Reconstruction Congress opposes Lincoln s and Johnson s plans for Reconstruction and instead implements its own plan to rebuild the South. The Politics of Reconstruction Lincoln s Plan

More information

Reconstruction s Presidents

Reconstruction s Presidents Reconstruction s Presidents Lincoln s Plan Former Confederate states: 10% of its citizens must swear loyalty to the United States. Representatives from that state would then be seated at Congress and

More information

To request an editable PPT version of this presentation, send a request to 1

To request an editable PPT version of this presentation, send a request to 1 To view this PDF as a projectable presentation, save the file, click View in the top menu bar of the file, and select Full Screen Mode ; upon completion of the presentation, hit ESC on your keyboard to

More information

Remember that the Union defeated the Confederacy in the Civil War.

Remember that the Union defeated the Confederacy in the Civil War. 2.4 The Reconstruction Era Remember that the Union defeated the Confederacy in the Civil War. 1. Predict how the federal government might treat the former Confederate states and what it might do about

More information

Reconstruction Timeline

Reconstruction Timeline Reconstruction Timeline 1865 The Civil War ends. Republican President Abraham Lincoln is assassinated. Democrat Andrew Johnson becomes president. 13 th Amendment to the Constitution passes. Congress creates

More information

Reconstruction After the war, the South needed to be rebuilt physically, economically, and politically. Reconstruction was the rebuilding of these

Reconstruction After the war, the South needed to be rebuilt physically, economically, and politically. Reconstruction was the rebuilding of these Reconstruction Reconstruction After the war, the South needed to be rebuilt physically, economically, and politically. Reconstruction was the rebuilding of these systems after the war. Presidential Plan

More information

Reconstruction ( ) US History & Government

Reconstruction ( ) US History & Government Reconstruction (1865-1877) US History & Government DO NOW Definition Reconstruct: To construct or build again Question In 1865 what needed to be reconstructed? Why? Lincoln s Second Inaugural Address.With

More information

to me concerning its effect on the residence requjrements and the age requirements for voters generally in the State of Indiana.

to me concerning its effect on the residence requjrements and the age requirements for voters generally in the State of Indiana. 1970 O. A. G. OFFICIAL OPINION NO. July 31, 1970 Hon. Edgar D. Whitcomb Governor of Indiana Room 206 State House Indianapolis, Indiana Dear Governor Whitcomb: You have asked my opinion regarding the application

More information

bk12c - The Reconstruction Era ( )

bk12c - The Reconstruction Era ( ) bk12c - The Reconstruction Era (1865-1877) MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. Why was a plan for Reconstruction of the South needed? A The Lincoln administration did not want to readmit the Confederate states to the Union.

More information

A Practical Guide to Understanding the Electoral System. Courtesy of:

A Practical Guide to Understanding the Electoral System. Courtesy of: WHY SHOULD VOTE? A Practical Guide to Understanding the Electoral System F O R S T U D E N T S Courtesy of: Flagler County Supervisor of Elections PO Box 901 Bunnell, Florida 32110 Phone: (386) 313-4170

More information

RECONSTRUCTION

RECONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1877 Learning Targets Why was it seen as necessary to reconstruct the South following the Civil War? In general terms, what did President Lincoln want to do with the Southern states?

More information

Were African Americans Free During Reconstruction?

Were African Americans Free During Reconstruction? Name: Date: Block# USII.3b (describing the impact of Reconstruction policies on the South and North) Were African Americans Free During Reconstruction? (Historical Thinking Kit) 1865: The Civil War ends.

More information

Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior Section 1

Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior Section 1 Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior Section 1 The Electorate The Constitution originally gave the power to decide voter qualifications to the States. Since 1789, many restrictions on voting rights have

More information

S apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 Terms and People Reconstruction Radical Republican Wade-Davis Bill Riv l for Reconstruction

S apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 Terms and People Reconstruction Radical Republican Wade-Davis Bill Riv l for Reconstruction Terms and People Reconstruction program implemented by the federal government between 1865 and 1877 to repair damage to the South caused by the Civil War and restore the southern states to the Union Radical

More information

Congressional Power over Elections

Congressional Power over Elections Wyoming Law Journal Volume 17 Number 3 Article 11 February 2018 Congressional Power over Elections Stuart B. Schoenburg Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.uwyo.edu/wlj Recommended Citation

More information

Reconstruction By USHistory.org 2016

Reconstruction By USHistory.org 2016 Name: Class: Reconstruction By USHistory.org 2016 This text discusses Reconstruction, or the period of rebuilding following the Civil War. The Civil War lasted from 1861 to 1865 and was fought between

More information

Were African Americans free during Reconstruction?

Were African Americans free during Reconstruction? Were African Americans free during Reconstruction? Reconstruction was the period between 1865 and 1877, when the nation tried to re-build itself after the Civil War. One of the main questions facing Americans

More information

Social Studies 7 Civics CH 4.3: FURTHERING CIVIL LIBERTIES

Social Studies 7 Civics CH 4.3: FURTHERING CIVIL LIBERTIES Social Studies 7 Civics CH 4.3: FURTHERING CIVIL LIBERTIES CIVIL WAR S CIVIL WAR S B. Seventeen other amendments have been added over the years. CIVIL WAR S C. Before, 1865 many African Americans were

More information

Unit 5: Civil War and Reconstruction DBQ 10: Reconstruction's Failure

Unit 5: Civil War and Reconstruction DBQ 10: Reconstruction's Failure Nrone _ Date _ Historical Context: Unit 5: Civil War and Reconstruction DBQ 10: Reconstruction's Failure The Civil War may have settled some significant national problems, but it created many more. Yes,

More information

RECONSTRUCTION REUNITING A NATION

RECONSTRUCTION REUNITING A NATION RECONSTRUCTION REUNITING A NATION IMPACT OF RECONSTRUCTION ON GEORGIA Reconstruction in Georgia was a time of major change in the state following the devastation of the Civil War. era lasted for a relatively

More information

DEMOCRATS DIGEST. A Monthly Newsletter of the Conference of Young Nigerian Democrats. Inside this Issue:

DEMOCRATS DIGEST. A Monthly Newsletter of the Conference of Young Nigerian Democrats. Inside this Issue: DEMOCRATS DIGEST A Monthly Newsletter of the Conference of Young Nigerian Democrats Inside this Issue: Electorate I INTRODUCTION Electorate, term applied to all of the eligible voters in a political democracy.

More information

Was Reconstruction a failure for former slaves? Defend your response with three reasons.

Was Reconstruction a failure for former slaves? Defend your response with three reasons. Reconstruction Essay: Document-Based Question The answer to the essay question is to be written on separate paper. In developing your answer to the essay, be sure to keep in mind the following definition:

More information

Presentation to WTS NC Triangle Chapter Brenda H. Rogers League of Women Voters US October 18,

Presentation to WTS NC Triangle Chapter Brenda H. Rogers League of Women Voters US October 18, 2016 Election, November 8: National, State and Local Offices Presentation to WTS NC Triangle Chapter Brenda H. Rogers League of Women Voters US October 18, 2016 www.lwv.org www.lwvnc.org League of Women

More information

Reconstruction and Its Effects

Reconstruction and Its Effects Reconstruction and Its Effects The U.S. begins to rebuild the South, but former slaves face new challenges as support fades for the policies of Reconstruction. Reconstruction and Its Effects SECTION 1

More information

Reconstruction ( )

Reconstruction ( ) Reconstruction (1865-77) Section One: Introduction and Lincoln s Viewpoints Why Reconstruction? In 1865, what/where needed to reconstructed in the United States? What Was Reconstruction? Program by the

More information

AMERICAN CONSTITUTION SOCIETY (ACS) CONSTITUTION IN THE CLASSROOM THE RIGHT TO VOTE MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM SPRING Lesson Plan Overview

AMERICAN CONSTITUTION SOCIETY (ACS) CONSTITUTION IN THE CLASSROOM THE RIGHT TO VOTE MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM SPRING Lesson Plan Overview AMERICAN CONSTITUTION SOCIETY (ACS) CONSTITUTION IN THE CLASSROOM THE RIGHT TO VOTE MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM SPRING 2019 Lesson Plan Overview The purpose of this lesson plan is to provide middle school

More information

B. Lincoln s Reconstruction Plan: Ten Percent Plan 1. Plans for Reconstruction began less than a year after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued

B. Lincoln s Reconstruction Plan: Ten Percent Plan 1. Plans for Reconstruction began less than a year after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued APUSH CH 22: Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction, 1865-1877 I. The Ordeal of Reconstruction A. Reconstructing the Nation: Questions to be Answered 1. How would the South be rebuilt?

More information

Chap. 17 Reconstruction Study Guide

Chap. 17 Reconstruction Study Guide Chap. 17 Reconstruction Study Guide True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. If it is false, fix it so that it is true. 1. Congress accepted without question Abraham Lincoln s plan to

More information

Pursuing Equality for African-Americans During Radical Reconstruction

Pursuing Equality for African-Americans During Radical Reconstruction Pursuing Equality for African-Americans During Radical Reconstruction Freedmen in the South Carolina Sea Islands http://web.gc.cuny.edu/ashp/toer/looking.html The End of the Civil War Jefferson Davis,

More information

Reconstruction. How can Northern resources help the South? In what ways can the South rebuild its economy?

Reconstruction. How can Northern resources help the South? In what ways can the South rebuild its economy? Reconstruction How can Northern resources help the South? In what ways can the South rebuild its economy? What can the government do to assist African Americans? Reconstruction Reconstruction: The period

More information

The Era of Reconstruction

The Era of Reconstruction The Era of Reconstruction 1 www.heartpunchstudio.com/.../reconstruction.jpg 2 Learning Objectives 3 Define the major problems facing the South and the nation after the Civil War. Analyze the differences

More information

Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction,

Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction, APUSH CH 22: Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction, 1865-1877 I. The Ordeal of Reconstruction A. Reconstructing the Nation: Questions to be Answered 1. How would the South be rebuilt?

More information

Constitutional Amendments during Reconstruction

Constitutional Amendments during Reconstruction Station 1 Constitutional Amendments during Reconstruction The group that experienced the most change, both short and long term, as a result of the Civil War were those African Americans who had been born

More information

REVIEWED! APUSH PERIOD 5: KEY CONCEPT 5.3 3/29/17 MOBILIZING ECONOMIES & SOCIETIES FOR WAR: Why does the Union win the war?

REVIEWED! APUSH PERIOD 5: KEY CONCEPT 5.3 3/29/17 MOBILIZING ECONOMIES & SOCIETIES FOR WAR: Why does the Union win the war? 3/29/17 APUSH PERIOD 5: KEY CONCEPT 5.3 1844-1877 REVIEWED! Why does the Union win the war? Confederacy early success (Battle of Bull Run, Peninsula campaign) Southern advantages: Fighting defensive war,

More information

The History of Voting Rights

The History of Voting Rights Voting The History of Voting Rights The Framers of the Constitution purposely left the power to set suffrage qualifications to each State. Suffrage means the right to vote. Franchise is another term with

More information

The War s Aftermath. Chapter 12, Section 1

The War s Aftermath. Chapter 12, Section 1 The War s Aftermath Chapter 12, Section 1 Human toll of the Civil War: The North lost 364,000 soldiers. The South lost 260,000 soldiers. Between 1865 and 1877, the federal government carried out a program

More information

CONSTITUTION TEST Your Name

CONSTITUTION TEST Your Name CONSTITUTION TEST Your Name 1. Which of the following is a right guaranteed by the Bill of Rights? Public Education Employment Voting Trial by Jury 2. The federal census of population is taken each five

More information

Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Session 2: Political Participation

Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Session 2: Political Participation Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Session 2: Political Participation Learning Targets How do Americans participate politically? How have voting rights been suppressed within the United States How

More information

Key Questions. 1. How should the seceded states be allowed to re-enter the Union? Should they?

Key Questions. 1. How should the seceded states be allowed to re-enter the Union? Should they? Key Questions 1. How should the seceded states be allowed to re-enter the Union? Should they? 4. What branch of government should direct the process of Reconstruction? 2. How do we rebuild the South after

More information

Reconstruction Chapter 4. Results of Civil War (1865) Questions still unanswered (Left up to victorious North)

Reconstruction Chapter 4. Results of Civil War (1865) Questions still unanswered (Left up to victorious North) Reconstruction Chapter 4 Results of Civil War (1865) The Union would be preserved (in doubt since 1850) Slavery would be abolished by the 13 th Amendment Over 600,000 lost their lives South is in economic

More information

The Ordeal of Reconstruction. Chapter 22

The Ordeal of Reconstruction. Chapter 22 The Ordeal of Reconstruction Chapter 22 Problems of Peace What to do with Confederate Leaders? South s economic & social structure collapsed Southern cities torn apart Southern planters bankrupt $2 billion

More information

Chapter 13 The Meaning of Freedom: The Failure of Reconstruction

Chapter 13 The Meaning of Freedom: The Failure of Reconstruction Chapter 13 The Meaning of Freedom: The Failure of Reconstruction 1867-1877 Overview Reconstruction 1867-1877 Presidential Reconstruction under Andrew Johnson Radical Reconstruction 1868 Election Constitutional

More information

1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within

1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within Amendments 11-27 Amendment 11 - Judicial Limits. Ratified 2/7/1795. The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against

More information

AIR Government Test Review U.S. Constitution

AIR Government Test Review U.S. Constitution AIR Government Test Review U.S. Constitution Principals of the U.S. Constitution Understanding the Constitution as the structure of the U.S. government and the Bill of Rights protecting citizen rights.

More information

RECONSTRUCTION POLICY & SC. Standard Indicator 8-5.1

RECONSTRUCTION POLICY & SC. Standard Indicator 8-5.1 RECONSTRUCTION POLICY & SC Standard Indicator 8-5.1 Rewind Review Civil War Ended Emancipation of Slaves Broke & decimated south Huge life loss on both sides Federal Reconstruction Policies: Impacted SC

More information

Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior Section 1: The Constitution and the Right to Vote

Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior Section 1: The Constitution and the Right to Vote Section 1: The Constitution and the Right to Vote Key Terms: suffrage; franchise; electorate A. The History of Voting Rights 1. In the early 1800s religious, property-ownership, and tax-payment qualifications

More information

The Five Freedoms: 1. Religion 2. Assembly 3. Press 4. Petition 5. Speech RAPPS

The Five Freedoms: 1. Religion 2. Assembly 3. Press 4. Petition 5. Speech RAPPS The Five Freedoms: 1. Religion 2. Assembly 3. Press 4. Petition 5. Speech RAPPS A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms,

More information

Chapter 16 Reconstruction and the New South

Chapter 16 Reconstruction and the New South Chapter 16 and the New South (1863 1896) What You Will Learn As the Civil War ended, disagreements over led to conflict, and African Americans lost many of the rights they had gained. Key Events 1863 President

More information

RECONSTRUCTION

RECONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1876 Reconstruction The Civil War devastated the South and it needed to be rebuilt. This period of rebuilding was called Reconstruction. In 1863 President Lincoln issued the Proclamation

More information

The Evolution of US Electoral Methods. Michael E. DeGolyer Professor, Government & International Studies Hong Kong Baptist University

The Evolution of US Electoral Methods. Michael E. DeGolyer Professor, Government & International Studies Hong Kong Baptist University The Evolution of US Electoral Methods Michael E. DeGolyer Professor, Government & International Studies Hong Kong Baptist University Evolution of the Right to Vote A. States have traditionally had primary

More information

PROFESSIONAL TEACHING STANDARDS BOARD. United States Constitution Study Guide

PROFESSIONAL TEACHING STANDARDS BOARD. United States Constitution Study Guide PROFESSIONAL TEACHING STANDARDS BOARD United States Constitution Study Guide Section 21-7-304, Wyoming Statutes, 1969--"All persons hereafter applying for certificates authorizing them to become administrators

More information