In your notes... What does Reconstruction mean in the context of the Civil War?
|
|
- Adam French
- 5 years ago
- Views:
Transcription
1 In your notes... What does Reconstruction mean in the context of the Civil War?
2 Official Reconstruction
3 HW read pages Quiz on Friday Handwritten notes
4 Research Paper Outline DUE Next Friday, November 7th Will work on in class! The better your outline = the better your paper!
5 Reconstruction period in which the United States began to rebuild after the Civil War, lasting from 1865 to 1877 An effort to repair the damage to the South and to restore the Southern states to the Union
6 The State of the South 2/3 southern shipping 9000 miles of railroads 1/3 of all livestock 100 s of miles of roads Value of southern property declined by 70% buildings, factories, bridges, etc. destroyed
7 Create a Reconstruction Plan You should address all issues: Economic (how are you going to help the economy) Political (what to do to make sure they never rebel again) Social (What to do with freed slaves and plantation owners) Be ready to share your plan with the class!
8 Reconstruction Questions How was the South to be brought back into the Union? What kind of society would the postwar South be? What would be the fate of the newly freedmen?
9 *Lincoln s Plan To re-enter the Union, Southern Confederate states must: ratify the 13th Amendment (abolished slavery) least 10% of a states population take an oath to support the Constitution & the Union Pardon to all Confederates who took the oath disband Confederate governments & form new ones; no former Confederate leaders could be part of the new government
10 Freedmen s Bureau established by Congress in 1865 food & medical aid, ensured fair wages, established public schools, & created special courts to settle disputes between white & African-American workers
11 Lincoln s Assassination shot by John Wilkes Booth in Ford s Theater in Washington ended Lincoln s Reconstruction Plan Succeeded by Andrew Johnson
12 *Andrew Johnson s Plans To re-enter the Union, Southern Confederate states must: Ratify the 13th amendment accept a Union appointed military governor, who would hold complete power until a new state government was organized limited rights of all former military Confederate officers & all those who owned property worth $20,000 or more
13 *Andrew Johnson s Plans Public education for all except the freedmen (newly freed slaves) Only whites allowed to vote & to participate in the framing of new southern state governments
14 Johnson s Social Plans vetoed Congress decision to enlarge the Freedmen's Bureau and pass the Civil Rights Act of 1866 would have prevented Black Codes or discriminatory laws from developing
15 *Radical Republican Plan impeached Johnson for violating Tenure of Office Act he illegally removed his Sec. of War from office Senate did not convict (by 1 vote)
16 *Radical Republican Plan To re-enter the Union, Southern Confederate states had to: 1) ratify the 13th amendment 2) ratify the 14th amendment (African-Americans given full citizenship rights) 3) ratify the 15th amendment ( right to vote not based on race)
17 *Radical Republican Plan 4) Freedmen could vote & run for public office 5) South would be divided into 5 military districts led by a military commander-would remain this way until states met the above conditions 6) (re-)established the Freedmen s Bureau: government organization that would help newly freed slaves
18 Sell Me Your Plan in partners, you will make an advertisement for one of the three plans for Reconstruction include: a catchy slogan why would this plan be the best choice? why are the other plans NOT a good choice? image(s)
19 Unofficial Reconstruction
20 Southern Politics Conflicts in the Republican Party scalawags = white southerners who joined the party, many small farmers carpetbaggers = Northerners who moves South after the war African Americans = registered to vote for the first time
21 Southern Politics Jim Crow Laws (Black Codes) enforced racial discrimination separate facilities Prevent voting grandfather clauses= only vote if your grandfather could vote in 1867 literacy tests and poll taxes
22 Literacy Test You have 10 minutes
23 What does this test have to do with knowing politics?
24 Lives of Former Slaves started own churches new schools ex. Howard University held public office remained the minority Hiram Revels = first black Senator
25 Lives of Former Slaves sharecropping = forced many freed slaves to farm land in exchange for a small piece of land and a large percentage of the crops what is this similar to?
26 Lives of Former Slaves Ku Klux Klan (KKK) = Southern vigilante (takes the law into their own hand) group wanted to destroy the Republican Party prevented people from exercising their right to vote should they be called vigilantes?
27 Collapse of Reconstruction support for Reconstruction weakened Panic of 1873= diffused attention to the South no Republican unity Southern Democrats gained control courts started to undo political and social changes
28 Reconstruction and Political Cartoons Purpose: image that has a political point persuade and amuse you How to analyze the cartoon? SCAMS!
29 S = Subject (What is the topic of the cartoon?) C = Caption (What is the title of the cartoon? What does it mean?) A = Actions (What is happening in the cartoon? Look for movement, actions and dialogue. These provide clues to the message and what the symbols represent) M = Message/ Theme (What is the author s point of view? What is the theme of the cartoon? What is the purpose for making this cartoon?) S = Symbols (What do the symbols in the cartoon represent?)
30 Reconstruction and Political Cartoons For each of the images provided, do a SCAMS analysis.
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 informationReconstruction Unit Vocabulary
Reconstruction Unit Vocabulary 1. Reconstruction: (1865 1877) Period of time following the Civil War during which the U.S. government worked to reunite the nation and to rebuild the southern states. 2.
More informationChapter 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 informationChapter 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 informationRebuild the south after the American Civil War The South was decimated after the American Civil War
1865-1877 Rebuild the south after the American Civil War Gone with the Wind May 29-2:34 PM May 29-2:34 PM The South was decimated after the American Civil War > Economically > Politically > Socially **war
More informationChap. 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 informationGoal 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 informationStandard 8-5.1: The Development of Reconstruction Policy Reconstruction Freedmen s Bureau
Standard 8-5.1: The Development of Reconstruction Policy During the periods of Reconstruction, industrial expansion, and the Progressive movement, South Carolina searched for ways to revitalize its economy
More informationEssential 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 information5.3.2 Reconstruction. By: Caleb and Harli
5.3.2 Reconstruction By: Caleb and Harli Overall Theme: Civil War and reconstruction caused slavery to end, it changed the relastionship between states and federal government. It caused debates over citizenship
More informationTHE RECONSTRUCTION ERA
THE RECONSTRUCTION ERA 1865-1877 ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS I. What problems faced the nation during Reconstruction? II. How well did Reconstruction governments in the South succeed? III. What factors promoted
More informationPost 1865: Effects of the War
Post 1865: Effects of the War Now what? Reconstruction Reconstruction 1865 Reconstruction Issues 1. Amending the Constitution to abolish slavery. 2. Bringing the former Southern states back into the Union.
More informationReconstruction ( )
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 information12 Reconstruction and Its Effects QUIT
12 Reconstruction and Its Effects QUIT CHAPTER OBJECTIVE INTERACT WITH HISTORY TIME LINE SECTION 1 The Politics of Reconstruction MAP SECTION 2 Reconstructing Society SECTION 3 The Collapse of Reconstruction
More informationSSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction.
SSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. a. Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction with Congressional Reconstruction, including the significance of Lincoln
More informationReconstruction 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 informationName Date The period after the Civil War was called Reconstruction. It changes our government and the Constitution. Three
Name Date The period after the Civil War was called Reconstruction. It changes our government and the Constitution. Three amendments, or changes to the Constitution, gave some Americans new civil rights.
More informationCreating 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 informationReconstruction
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 informationThe 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 informationReconstruction 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 informationChapter 12: Reconstruction ( )
Name: Period Page# Chapter 12: Reconstruction (1865 1877) Section 1: Presidential Reconstruction What condition was the South in following the Civil War? How were Lincoln s and Johnson s Reconstruction
More informationAim: 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 informationRECONSTRUCTION
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 informationThe 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 informationUnit 8 Review Standard Indicators Which amendments did SC refuse to ratify? 2. What did these two amendments guarantee?
Unit 8 Review Standard Indicators 8-5.1-4 1. Which amendments did SC refuse to ratify? 2. What did these two amendments guarantee? 3. What were the purposes of the Reconstruction plans of the Federal Government?
More informationRECONSTRUCTION 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 informationReconstruction 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 informationTHE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION
THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION C 1865 1877 Long Term Effects of the Civil War Approximately 2%, or roughly 620,000 men, lost their lives in the war. Over 1 million others had been wounded. Expanded roles for
More informationS 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 informationChapter 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 informationB. 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 informationSSUSH10 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 informationThe Ordeal of Reconstruction
The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865 1877 Lincoln s 2 nd Inaugural Address March 4, 1865 With malice towards none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us
More informationLincoln s Assassination
Reconstruction Lincoln s Assassination John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln at Ford s Theatre in Washington, D.C. Lincoln died the next morning less than one week after Lee s surrender Lincoln s death was actually
More informationReconstruction 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 informationReconstruction ( ) 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 informationReconstruction
Reconstruction 1865-1877 After the Civil War, enormous problems faced the nation, especially the South. Americans had to bring the North and South together again. The government developed a plan for states
More informationRECONSTRUCTION
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 informationThe 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 informationRECONSTRUCTION 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 informationAPUSH RECONSTRUCTION REVIEWED!
APUSH 1863-1877 RECONSTRUCTION REVIEWED! American Pageant (Kennedy)Chapter 22 American History (Brinkley) Chapter 15 America s History (Henretta) Chapter 15 RECONSTRUCTION Key Challenges: 1. How do we
More informationReconstruction
Reconstruction 1865-1877 Lincoln s Assassination Questions Why was Where How Booth Who What soon did able was does as the to the assassination enter Booth assassin? war the say ended access to the Presidential
More informationThe Ordeal of Reconstruction ~ ~
The Ordeal of Reconstruction ~ 1865 1877 ~ How the war changed the nation: 620,000 dead Americans Economy of the South shatteredwidens gap between the N & S Technological innovations States rights vs.
More informationThe Civil War. Reconstruction of the South
The Civil War Reconstruction of the South 1865-1877 Intended Targets for Assassination on Friday, April 14, 1865: Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson William Seward Ford s Theatre Petersen House Lincoln on
More informationGovernment agency to help former slaves and poor whites. Many former northern abolitionists risked their lives to help southern freedmen.
Government agency to help former slaves and poor whites. Many former northern abolitionists risked their lives to help southern freedmen. Called carpetbaggers by white southern Democrats. Freedman s Bureau
More informationThe 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 informationName Date Class KEY TERMS
Chapter 17, Section 1 For use with textbook pages 500 503 RECONSTRUCTION PLANS Reconstruction KEY TERMS The period of rebuilding the South after the Civil War and the various plans for accomplishing the
More informationREVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 18 TEST. 1. Fort Sumter Where the first shots of the Civil War were fired in South Carolina.
Define or discuss the following with detail: REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 18 TEST 1. Fort Sumter Where the first shots of the Civil War were fired in South Carolina. 2. Lincoln s First Inaugural Address Lincoln
More informationCHAPTER 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 informationEnd 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 informationChapter 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 informationbk12c - 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 informationREVIEWED! 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 informationReconstruction ( )
America: Pathways to the Present Chapter 12 Reconstruction (1865 1877) Copyright 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. All rights reserved. America:
More informationl Money, supplies, rebuilding, direction, jobs
1865-1877 The process of reuniting the nation and rebuilding the southern states after the Civil War without slavery. Election of 1864 l No Hannibal Hamlin, needs border states l Sherman s capture of Atlanta
More information8-5.1 Development of reconstruction. plans, Black codes & Freedman s Bureau
8-5.1 Development of reconstruction plans, Black codes & Freedman s Bureau I. Reconstruction policy 1. Reconstruction Era - 1865 1877 2. After The Civil War Southern States Were Faced With Three large
More informationSSUSH10 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 informationHistoriography: The study of the way interpretations of history change.
Reconstruction (1865 1877) Chapter 15 Historiography: The study of the way interpretations of history change. Events in history only happen once, but history books are always being rewritten why? Answer
More informationThe 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 informationVUS.7d. Political, Economic, and Social Impact
VUS.7d Political, Economic, and Social Impact Southern Resentment Confederate general Robert E. Lee urged the South to accept defeat and unite as a nation after the war ended at Appomattox. However, the
More informationReconstruction. 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 informationNAME DATE CLASS. Dec 1863 President Lincoln announces Ten Percent Plan
Lesson 1 Planning Reconstruction ESSENTIAL QUESTION How do new ideas change the way people live? GUIDING QUESTIONS 1. Why did leaders disagree about the South rejoining the Union? 2. How did Lincoln s
More informationElection of Lincoln (U) defeats McClellan (D) to 21; 55%-45%
Election of 1864 Lincoln (U) defeats McClellan (D) - 212 to 21; 55%-45% Republican Party vanished - Joined w/ War Democrats to form Union Party maneuver to corale unified front against the Southerners
More informationKey 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 informationThe ruins of a Train Depot after the Civil War. Reconstruction
The ruins of a Train Depot after the Civil War. Reconstruction THE RADICAL REPUBLICANS Although President Johnson agreed to let Texas back into the Union, Congress did not and refused to accept the Constitution
More informationReconstruction Chapter 12
Reconstruction 1865-1877 Chapter 12 Reconstruction Physical Buildings Cities Farms Society Restructuring society Classes Dreams of Home Swords into Plowshares Lincoln s plan Amnesty Slaves free Lenient
More informationThe 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 informationCHAPTER 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 informationSLIDE 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 informationFRANCHISE AND NOT THIS MAN. Thomas Nast Working for Harpers Weekly
FRANCHISE AND NOT THIS MAN Thomas Nast Working for Harpers Weekly Who is Thomas Nast? What does all men are created equal mean? Today? After the Civil War? Strange Fruit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/oma
More informationChapter 12. Reconstruction and Its Effects
Chapter 12 Reconstruction and Its Effects Section 1: The Politics of Reconstruction Return of Confederate States Timeframe: 1865-1877 Process used by federal government to restore Confederate states to
More informationToday, 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 informationChapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South ( ) Section 1 Reconstruction Plans
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 1 Reconstruction Plans If you were President Lincoln, how would you have treated the South after it lost the Civil War? A. I would have punished
More informationWarm-up for Handout- Analyzing different perspectives during Reconstruction.
Warm-up for 12-1 Handout- Analyzing different perspectives during Reconstruction. Reconstruction 1. period of rebuilding following the war, lasted from 1865-77 2. process of federal govt. readmitting Confederate
More informationNow That We Are Free: Reconstruction and the New South, Chapter 14
Now That We Are Free: Reconstruction and the New South, 1863-1890 Chapter 14 The Struggle to Define Reconstruction Chapter 14.3 Presidential Reconstruction President Andrew Johnson who became president
More informationReconstruction: 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 information9 US History Student Name: Unit 3: Reconstruction. Unit Questions. (Prepare to answer these questions for unit exam) Thought Jots
9 US History Student Name: Unit 3: Reconstruction Period: Time Period: 1865-1877 Unit Questions (Prepare to answer these questions for unit exam) 1. Why was Lincoln assassinated? 2. What was Presidential
More informationAim: How should the South have been treated at the end of the Civil War?
RECONSTRUCTION Aim: How should the South have been treated at the end of the Civil War? Homework: Thurs. 9/13 :Civil War Map Fri. 9/14 :Civil War Map Quiz Do Now: Using Causes of the Civil War handout
More informationReconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War
Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War Reconstruction s Key Questions 1. How do we bring the South back into the Union? 4. What branch of government should control the process of Reconstruction? 2. How do
More informationHow 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 informationThe End of the War, Outcomes, and Reconstruction
The End of the War, Outcomes, and Reconstruction North and South routinely exchanged prisoners at start of war Grant stopped exchanging when he heard the South killed several black military prisoners War
More informationNow That We Are Free. Reconstruction and the New South
Now That We Are Free Reconstruction and the New South 1863-1890 The South After the War Entire plantation system collapsed, Southern economic and social structure destroyed, transportation shut down, major
More informationReconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War
Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War Reconstruction s Key Questions 1. How do we bring the South back into the Union? 4. What branch of government should control the process of Reconstruction? 2. How do
More informationWhat was RECONSTRUCTION AND Why did it fail to adequately protect African Americans for the long term? Reconstruction ( )
What was RECONSTRUCTION AND Why did it fail to adequately protect African Americans for the long term? Reconstruction (1866-1877) Review. Lincoln and the Civil War CRISIS THESIS!!!!!! A new thesis we can
More informationCHAPTER 22 Reconstruction,
CHAPTER 22 Reconstruction, 1865 1877 1. Problems of Peace (pp. 477 479) In this section, the authors describe the collapsed economy and social structure of the South and the beaten but unbent attitude
More information*Assassination Videos*
Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1865 (5 days after the war ended) Andrew Johnson became president and vowed to fulfill Lincoln s goal of putting the nation back together *Assassination
More informationThe Politics of Reconstruction
The Politics of Reconstruction Reconstruction was done to rebuild after the Civil War, and lasted from 1865 to 1877. It also a way the federal government readmitted the Confederate states. LINCOLN S 10%
More informationThe Civil War and Reconstruction PAULDING COUNTY: U.S. HISTORY
The Civil War and Reconstruction PAULDING COUNTY: U.S. HISTORY Standards SSUSH9 Evaluate key events, issues, and individuals relating to the Civil War. SSUSH10 Identify legal, political, and social dimensions
More informationChapter 12. Reconstruction
Chapter 12 Reconstruction Effects of the War Women Take over for men Run farms Spies Nurses Raise cleanliness standards in medicine Effects of the War African-Americans Not allowed to fight early in war
More informationConflict Resolution Questions
Glory Pop Quiz 1. What is the name of perhaps the most famous regiment of black soldiers fighting in the Civil War? 2. Who was the white Colonel in charge of this group? 3-4. Who were 2 famous Abolitionists
More informationThirteenth Amendment. The Civil War Amendments And the Civil Rights Movement. Assassination of Lincoln. What if Lincoln had lived?
Thirteenth Amendment The Civil War Amendments And the Civil Rights Movement What you need to know about the 13 th, 14 th and 15 th Amendments, which were ratified during Reconstruction, and their application
More informationRemember 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 informationKamala Harris U.S. Senator, California January 2017 present
Kamala Harris U.S. Senator, California January 2017 present Cory Booker U.S. Senator, New Jersey October 2013 present Tim Scott U.S. Senator, South Carolina January 2013 present Mo Cowan U.S. Senator,
More informationChapter 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 informationReconstruction. Chapter 3 How to reunite the nation? How to rebuild the South? What civil rights do African-Americans have?
Reconstruction Chapter 3 How to reunite the nation? How to rebuild the South? What civil rights do African-Americans have? I. Presidential Reconstruction (1863-1866) A. Lincoln s 10% Plan (1863) 10% white
More informationReconstruction
Name: Date: Class Period: 8.1 (Standards: 1, 4, 5; Themes: MOV, SOC, CIV, ECO) Reconstruction 1865-1877 Regional tension following the Civil War complicated efforts to heal the nation and to redefine the
More informationKey Questions. 4. What branch of government should control the process of Reconstruction? 1. How do we bring the South back into the Union?
Key Questions 1. How do we bring the South back into the Union? 4. What branch of government should control the process of Reconstruction? 2. How do we rebuild the South after its destruction during the
More information08.01 A Nation Divided
08.01 A Nation Divided The causes of the Civil War Each region was distinctive with its own political, economic, and social interests. Issues that divided the Union North South Slavery Abolitionists (saw
More informationChapter 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