Now That We Are Free. Reconstruction and the New South

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Now That We Are Free. Reconstruction and the New South"

Transcription

1 Now That We Are Free Reconstruction and the New South

2 The South After the War Entire plantation system collapsed, Southern economic and social structure destroyed, transportation shut down, major cities in ruins, agriculture crippled. Emancipated blacks established schools and churches in an attempt to protect their new freedoms Reconstruction is a battle over the implications of Emancipation Just how Emancipated would Freedmen be????

3 Issues of Reconstruction= 3 R s Reconstruction Rebuild the war torn South Reestablish the Union torn apart by secession Remake Southern society without Slavery

4 Preparing for Reconstruction Lincoln s 10% Plan Lenient Pardoned (except military & officials) oath to Union & emancipation 10% of voters create new state with malice toward none and Honey, charity lets go for all to to achieve the show and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves.

5 Preparing for Reconstruction the South for Radical Republicans Offer a Different Vision Wade-Davis Bill- harsh Punish & destroy economy Majority take ironclad oath Confederates striped of citizenship Committed to Union, emancipation, and freedmen s rights Lincoln vetoed bill Abe and Radicals agree 13 th Amendment-free slaves Freedmen s Bureau All purpose relief agency 1 st attempt social welfare Foundation of Reconstruction We will punish what they did and we will end slavery!!! Pay back time!!!! Senator Benjamin Wade (R-OH) Don t You think guys this started bill will the bring war the and Union now you back must together, pay!!! quickly. So, I will Thaddeus pocket veto Stevens it!!!! Congressman Henry W. Davis (R-MD)

6 Fruits of Freedom Freedom of Movement Unfettered movement No passes/look for family Rise of black pop. Urban Offered community Symbolic of freedom Forty Acres and a Mule Sherman s Field Order No. 15 Confiscated land redistributed to freedmen Physical proof of freedom Temporary

7 Fruits of Freedom Education Read & write could conduct own legal affairs, jobs, read newspapers and citizens Primary and Colleges 1 st education system in south Black Church Source of spiritual and psychological support Place to assume leadership roles

8 Struggle to Define Reconstruction Presidential Reconstruction- Very Lenient & White Supremacy 1. Amnesty and Pardon Return all property $20,000- personally pardon 2. Terms of Admittance 13 th Amendment Renounce secession Repudiated CSA debts Elections Congress out of session By 1865 ALL 11 states back in the Union Outraged 1. Most States did not accept 13 th 2. Ex-Confederates back in power 3. State Govts passed Black Codes Had the War been fought in vain?

9 Under Johnson s Reconstruction Black Codes Vagrancy Must sign work contracts Living locations Outlawing interracial Barred black from jury HYPERLINK FOR TODAY S ARTICLE

10 Struggle to Define Reconstruction Congressional Reconstruction & 14 th Amendment Congress Refused to admit Southerners Investigation on status of South CHAOS!!! Counter Johnson s Plan Freedmen s Bureau reauthorized Civil Rights Bill African Americans (except N.A.) are citizens Johnson vetoed both bills Congress then overrides his vetoes (They know that another Congress can overwrite it.) 14 th Amendment

11 Struggle to Define Reconstruction 14 th Amendment 1. All born in USA/Citizens 2. Equal protection of the law applied Bill of Rights. 3. Deny right to vote/loss of representation in DC 4. Confederates banned from office 5. Repudiated CSA Debt/no compensation for loss of slaves Johnson vs. Radical Republicans Both campaigned at 1866 Midterm elections on 14 th Radicals win seats!!!

12 Radical Republicans Take Control 1. South should be punished for the war and forced to protect the rights of freedmen (former slaves). 2. Reconstruction Act of 1867: (Over Johnson Veto) *Divided South into 5 military districts and placed them under military rule (Military Governor). *Effectively disbanded state governments established under Lincoln/Johnson plans *Required states to ratify 14 th amendment Guaranteed freedmen a vote at new constitutional conventions where all Southern states were to write NEW state constitutions 15 th Amendment: Suffrage for African-Americans (but not women) Struggle to Define Reconstruction

13 Struggle to Define Reconstruction 1867:Congress passes Tenure in Office Act Prohibits President from firing cabinet officials without consent of Congress(limit powers of President during Reconstruction) 1868: Pres. Dismisses Sec. of War Stanton (Radical) replaced him with Grant House votes to impeach, fails in Congress by 1 vote would have seriously weakened executive branch. Bad precedent One year left Wade, really??? Benjamin Wade, the president pro tem of the Senate was a unknown???

14 White Southerners especially despised these three groups: Carpetbaggers: Northerners who came down to make a profit through rebuilding, land speculation, etc. Held state offices during Republican rule. Scalawags: White Southerners who supported Republican policies. Most were small farmers from mountainous regions had owned no slaves and sought to get ahead during Reconstruction. Eventually, most drifted back to Democrats Freedmen: Backbone of Southern Republicanism provided 8 of 10 Republican votes Implementing Reconstruction

15 Vote early Implementing Reconstruction and vote often! For Democrats!!! Creating Reconstruction Governments in the South Ushered in a brief period of Republican dominance in Southern States as most freedmen registered Republican. More than 700,000 freedmen enfranchised; 10-15% of white voters disenfranchised (Republican rule in the South is brief only lasts a decade) Voted for internal improvements (public works) paid for with higher taxes (some on land for the first time ever in the South) Passed laws using tax $$ to support black education, schools, etc. Created a public school system (segregated) that had been non-existent in the South previously Greatly outraged Southern whites and Democrats called it Negro Rule Most of Republicans were white : 22 African Americans did serve office (2 senators 20 representatives) and over 600 in state offices No African American became Governor Corruption was exception not the norm North was more corrupt than South (Boss Tweed Tammany Hall) Show Clip from Gangs of NY again.

16 Election of 1868 U. S. Grant (R) vs. Seymour (D) Grant stood for moderation Seymour fear monger Grant wins Reality Many supported Seymour s racist ideas Freedmen made the difference for Grant KKK an effective tool in south Implementing Reconstruction

17 Implementing Reconstruction suffrage hour 15 th Amendment ( ) African American males were implied in the 14 th, to vote, but Congress wanted it guaranteed in the wake of Southern resistance. Women s rights activist were disappointed for being left out States could prohibit IF they did not invoke race, color, or previous condition of servitude. No it s universal hour Elizabeth Cady Stanton It s the Negro s Frederick Douglas

18 Implementing Reconstruction Rise of White Resistance KKK Purpose Keep social order (whites on top) Prevent poor whites and blacks alliance Prevent Voting Enforcement Acts 1870 Military protected freedmen Revealed how vulnerability of Freedmen w/o military presence

19 Corruption and Scandal Grant s tenure is noted by extreme corruption (Grantism) and scaling back of military presence in the South that allows Redemption of the Southern states to begin. Credit Mobilier Scandal Union Pacific Railroad bribes VP Whiskey Ring Scandal No taxes collect by Treasury Sec. North Retreats Grant supported Amnesty Act Pardon almost ALL Confederates Accomplished Goal-no need for strong fed. govt. Citizenship Civil Rights Suffrage 1869: Congress allows Freedmen s Bureau to expire and close shop Mismanagement of South by Republican Rule Reconstruction Abandoned

20 Reconstruction Abandoned Election of 1872 Grant (R) vs. Greeley (D) Reconstruction Issue still alive, but fading Panic of 1873(-1877) Boom after Civil War ends 9,000% inflation rate in post-war South 15% unemployment nationally Increases outrage in the South against Republican governments who raise taxes to help Freedmen In 1874, Democrats (Redeemers) regain House for the first time since Distracted Reconstruction Remember what we were fighting for Remember the bloody flags

21 Reconstruction Abandoned Return of Terrorism KKK resurges in South w/o military intervention Colfax Massacre 100 African Americans killed (5 th Hour 12/15/11) Mississippi Plan Intimidation at polls Military support was denied /Democrats regain power Redeemers Civil Rights Act of 1875 Equal access to public facilities 1883 Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional Last Act until 1960 s

22 Reconstruction Abandoned End of Reconstruction Compromise of 1877 Democrats will concede electoral votes and thus the White House if Republicans will: Remove last military forces in South Send federal monies for internal improvements Require Hayes to appoint Southerners to cabinet positions Reconstruction is OVER Redemption complete

23 Reconstruction Abandoned Redemption Sharecropping- undermined 13 th Amendment Segregation- undermined 14 th Amendment Plessey v. Ferguson- undermined the 14 th Amendment Disenfranchisement-undermined the 15 th Amendment Poll Tax- In FL you paid $1.00 a year, but if you don t pay for 10 years must pay $10.00 a year plus interest Literacy Test Grandfather Clause (only in effect for 10 years/ unconstitutional) LA- 1896: 130,000 Blacks vote 1904: 1,000 Blacks vote 27% of whites could not vote as a result of restrictions

24 Reconstruction at a glance Presidential Reconstruction: ( ) Lenient, quick readmission of states, 10% oaths, enables Southerners to adopt black codes and limit freedoms of freedmen Republican/Radical Reconstruction: ( ) More severe, includes passage of Reconstruction Amendments, Civil Rights Act and Force Acts, enables black Republican voters to briefly exercise power at a state level. Requires Federal Military Presence in the South to enforce. Redemption: ( ) With Republican and Northern public support for a military presence in the South fading, Southern democrats use intimidation (Klan) and legal means (challenging elections) to redeem their states. The Solid South is born and much of the gains made for freedmen are reversed.

25 Black Reconstruction : Efforts by Freedmen in the South to establish their own institutions and preserve their own identities and liberties. Growth of black churches that provided community, relief, funds for schools and support for Republican policies Black schools: by ,000 black schools in south (partly funded by Northern philanthropic societies) Advanced schools like Howard, Atlanta and Fisk Universities opened for blacks (where future civil rights leaders will attend) Family bonds were strengthened as marriages became legal and broken families were reunited Together, groups pooled resources to buy land or they entered into sharecropping in the crop-lien economy Increased voting and office holding (Before Redemption )

26 Two Major Failures in Reconstruction 1. No LAND REFORM!!! 2. NO LASTING FEDERAL MILITARY PRESENCE IN THE SOUTH TO ENFORCE EQUAL PROTECTION UNDER THE LAW

27 Troubled Legacy of Reconstruction Much resentment of the North in the South Blacks still oppressed by Democratic state governments and black codes will become Jim Crow laws South becomes the Solid South (democrat) Some much needed reform is passed during Radical/Republican Reconstruction phase

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

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

APUSH RECONSTRUCTION REVIEWED!

APUSH 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 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

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

Reconstruction. 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? 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 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

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

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

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

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

History 1301 U.S. to Reconstruction

History 1301 U.S. to Reconstruction History 1301 U.S. to 1877 Chapter 15 ~ Reconstruction Unit 4 Chapter 15 Hollinger 1301 1 Reconstruction: Vindictive? Reform and righting wrongs? Too little, not long enough? First step toward multiracial

More information

Chapter 12. Reconstruction and Its Effects

Chapter 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 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

THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION

THE 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 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

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

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

FRANCHISE AND NOT THIS MAN. Thomas Nast Working for Harpers Weekly

FRANCHISE 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 information

Reconstruction Chapter 12

Reconstruction 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 information

Reconstruction. Aftermath of the Civil War. AP US History

Reconstruction. Aftermath of the Civil War. AP US History Reconstruction Aftermath of the Civil War AP US History 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

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

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

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

Election of Lincoln (U) defeats McClellan (D) to 21; 55%-45%

Election 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 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

Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War

Reconstruction: 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 information

Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War

Reconstruction: 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 information

History 1301 U.S. to 1877

History 1301 U.S. to 1877 History 1301 U.S. to 1877 Unit 4 - Lecture 3 ~ Reconstruction Unit 4 Lecture 3 Hollinger 1301 1 Reconstruction Introduction: Myth and Counter-myth: Vindictive Yankees Unreconstructed Rebels Vivid economic

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

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

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

Key Questions. Reconstruction 12/5/14. Chapters 22 & 23. What Branch of Government Should Control Reconstruction?

Key Questions. Reconstruction 12/5/14. Chapters 22 & 23. What Branch of Government Should Control Reconstruction? Reconstruction Chapters 22 & 23 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

More information

Rebuild the south after the American Civil War The South was decimated after the American Civil War

Rebuild 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 information

CHAPTER 22 Reconstruction,

CHAPTER 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

Key Questions. 2. How do we rebuild the South economically after its destruction during the war?

Key Questions. 2. How do we rebuild the South economically after its destruction during the war? Key Questions 1. How should the South be Readmitted and Who should control The process? 2. How do we rebuild the South economically after its destruction during the war? 3. How do we integrate and protect

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

Lincoln s Assassination

Lincoln 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 information

RECONSTRUCTION. How do we rebuild the union?

RECONSTRUCTION. How do we rebuild the union? RECONSTRUCTION How do we rebuild the union? PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION Lincoln s Interpretation Moderation and reconciliation Administrative action (secession illegal) Lincoln s Plan (1863) Amnesty to

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

The Politics of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.1, pages

The Politics of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.1, pages The Politics of Reconstruction The Americans, Chapter 12.1, pages 376-382. Lincoln s Plan for Reconstruction Reconstruction was the period during which the United States began to rebuild after the Civil

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

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

CONTENT BLOCK. Reconstruction

CONTENT BLOCK. Reconstruction CONTENT BLOCK Reconstruction 5 Essential Questions about Reconstruction 1. How is the South going to be rebuilt? 2. What is going to happen to free blacks? 3. How are Southern states going to be reintegrated

More information

Reconstruction

Reconstruction Reconstruction 1863-1877 Essential Question Explain the extent to which constitutional and social developments contributed to maintaining continuity as well as fostering change during the Civil War to

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

Reconstruction Unit Vocabulary

Reconstruction 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 information

12 Reconstruction and Its Effects QUIT

12 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 information

Historiography: The study of the way interpretations of history change.

Historiography: 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 information

Key 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. 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 information

In your notes... What does Reconstruction mean in the context of the Civil War?

In your notes... What does Reconstruction mean in the context of the Civil War? In your notes... What does Reconstruction mean in the context of the Civil War? Official Reconstruction HW read pages 184-189 Quiz on Friday Handwritten notes Research Paper Outline DUE Next Friday, November

More information

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A The Check Your Knowledge quizzes are used as interactive study guides. You use them to determine what you know and don t know before you begin to

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

Key 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. 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 information

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz I

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz I All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz I These questions are used as quizzes. These questions are also 1/3 of the questions for the objective part of the Exam that ends the Unit, with the

More information

5.3.2 Reconstruction. By: Caleb and Harli

5.3.2 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 information

The Ordeal of Reconstruction

The 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 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

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

Total War and the devastation of the South

Total War and the devastation of the South THREE ISSUES Why was the war fought? The Emancipation Proclamation Total War and the devastation of the South THREE ISSUES Why was the war fought? To Preserve the Union THREE ISSUES Why was the war fought?

More information

l Money, supplies, rebuilding, direction, jobs

l 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 information

Chapter 15 Reconstruction,

Chapter 15 Reconstruction, Chapter 15 Reconstruction, 1863-1877 THREE PLANS FOR RECONSTRUCTION LINCOLN PROPOSED HIS PLAN IN 1863: HE OFFERED A PARDON TO ALL SUPPORTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY IF THEY SWORE ALLEGIANCE TO THE UNION AND

More information

The Politics of Reconstruction

The 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 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

Warm-up for Handout- Analyzing different perspectives during Reconstruction.

Warm-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 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

Reconstruction. A Problem-Based Approach. Developed by Rob Gouthro & Fran O Malley Delaware Social Studies Education Project

Reconstruction. A Problem-Based Approach. Developed by Rob Gouthro & Fran O Malley Delaware Social Studies Education Project Reconstruction A Problem-Based Approach Developed by Rob Gouthro & Fran O Malley Delaware Social Studies Education Project Teaching American History Teacher s Briefing This problem-based learning scenario

More information

4. What branch of government should control the process of Reconstruction? 1. How do we bring the South back into the Union?

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 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

Chapter 12: Reconstruction ( )

Chapter 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 information

Chapter 12. Reconstruction

Chapter 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 information

Now That We Are Free: Reconstruction and the New South, Chapter 14

Now 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 information

Reconstruction

Reconstruction 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 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

Chapter 16 Reconstruction

Chapter 16 Reconstruction Chapter 16 Reconstruction 1. Which of the following statements is true of Lincoln s Ten Percent Plan? A. It stipulated that at least ten percent of former slaves must be accorded the right to vote within

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

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

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. a. Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction with Congressional Reconstruction, including the significance of Lincoln

More information

Reconstruction: The New South. Presentation by Mr. Jeff Kilmer & Mr. Cameron Flint: Cloverleaf H.S. Lodi OH

Reconstruction: The New South. Presentation by Mr. Jeff Kilmer & Mr. Cameron Flint: Cloverleaf H.S. Lodi OH Reconstruction: The New South Presentation by Mr. Jeff Kilmer & Mr. Cameron Flint: Cloverleaf H.S. Lodi OH Chapter 15 Section 1: Presidential Reconstruction Concerning Reconstruction there are 3 what if

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

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

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

Post 1865: Effects of the War

Post 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 information

Sherman s March. Feel the hard hand of war Burned houses, farms, pillaged food and resources Attacked hostile civilians as well.

Sherman s March. Feel the hard hand of war Burned houses, farms, pillaged food and resources Attacked hostile civilians as well. Sherman s March Feel the hard hand of war Burned houses, farms, pillaged food and resources Attacked hostile civilians as well Human Impact Economic Impact Key Questions 1. How do we bring the South back

More information

39 Which of the following statements is true of Lincoln s Ten Percent Plan? A. It stipulated that at least ten percent of former slaves must be

39 Which of the following statements is true of Lincoln s Ten Percent Plan? A. It stipulated that at least ten percent of former slaves must be AP US History Mr. Blackmon Chapter 16 Reconstruction 39 Which of the following statements is true of Lincoln s Ten Percent Plan? A. It stipulated that at least ten percent of former slaves must be accorded

More information

4. Which of the following was NOT a. B. The protection of the civil rights of. C. The imposition of military rule upon the

4. Which of the following was NOT a. B. The protection of the civil rights of. C. The imposition of military rule upon the Bellwork 12/10 1. Slavery was abolished in the United States by A. the Emancipation Proclamation B. act of Congress C. the 13th Amendment to the Constitution D. the end of the Civil War 2. The Freedman

More information

Key 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. 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 information

Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History

Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History HI 202 Work to be done. Jan. 28 Article 1 Approved Feb. 4 Article 1 Due Feb. 11 EXAM ONE Feb. 12 Learning Lunch Broken Columns, Pointed Arches and Baroque Bordellos:

More information

Reconstruction. What goals should the government set to reconstruct the United States? (Aftershock 1-9)

Reconstruction. What goals should the government set to reconstruct the United States? (Aftershock 1-9) Reconstruction The year is 1865, and at last the Civil War is over. The South s primary labor system, slavery, has been abolished. About 4.5 million African Americans now have their freedom but lack money,

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

9 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. 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 information

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY 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

More information

Questions Facing the Union

Questions Facing the Union Reconstruction Questions Facing the Union There were a number of significant questions facing the US following the Civil War What to do with the four million freed blacks who were no longer slaves? What

More information

Unit 8 Review Standard Indicators Which amendments did SC refuse to ratify? 2. What did these two amendments guarantee?

Unit 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 information

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY 13 th Amendment Ratified in December, 1865. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been

More information

April 11, 1865 Lincoln Resists speech to Congress appealed for flexibility no success Lincoln s last speech Lincoln s Assassination April 14, 1865 Goo

April 11, 1865 Lincoln Resists speech to Congress appealed for flexibility no success Lincoln s last speech Lincoln s Assassination April 14, 1865 Goo Aftermath of War Chapter 15 Reconstruction Confederate leaders Southern civilization collapsed Economy Agriculture Slavery Reconstruction Question Nothing in Constitution! Had the South really seceded?

More information

Civil War and. Reconstruction VUS.7 Cont.

Civil War and. Reconstruction VUS.7 Cont. Civil War and Reconstruction VUS.7 Cont. Secession of Southern States I. Political Effects of the Civil War A. Lincoln s views 1. In the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln described the Civil War as a struggle

More information

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY 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

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

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A

All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A All Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A These questions are used as quizzes. These questions are also 1/3 of the questions for the objective part of the Exam that ends Unit 1, with the other

More information