Thaddeus Stevens. Charles Sumner

Similar documents
Reconstruction Begins

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

The Era of Reconstruction

Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South ( ) Section 1 Reconstruction Plans

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

CONTENT BLOCK. Reconstruction

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

Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction,

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

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

APUSH RECONSTRUCTION REVIEWED!

Government agency to help former slaves and poor whites. Many former northern abolitionists risked their lives to help southern freedmen.

Reconstruction. Aftermath of the Civil War. AP US History

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

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

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

CHAPTER 15 - RECONSTRUCTION. APUSH Mr. Muller

l Money, supplies, rebuilding, direction, jobs

The Ordeal of Reconstruction

Chapter 16 - Reconstruction

Reconstruction

CHAPTER 1. Reconstruction and the New South ( )

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

Chapter 17 - Reconstruction

Reconstruction Reconstruction Plans: Chapter 14, Section 1

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

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

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

Additional Material: Overview of Presidential and Congressional Reconstruction

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

RECONSTRUCTION

17-2 The Fight over Reconstruction

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

Wayne E. Sirmon HI 201 United States History

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

Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War

Reconstruction Chapter 12

Reconstruction By USHistory.org 2016

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

Standard 8-5.1: The Development of Reconstruction Policy Reconstruction Freedmen s Bureau

opposed to dogmatic, purpose approach of his radical fellow partisans.

THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION

Civil War and. Reconstruction VUS.7 Cont.

Reconstruction Practice Test

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

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

History 1301 U.S. to Reconstruction

History 1301 U.S. to 1877

Pursuing Equality for African-Americans During Radical Reconstruction

Congressional Reconstruction

The Ordeal of Reconstruction ~ ~

Reconstruction

RECONSTRUCTION. How do we rebuild the union?

The Civil War and Reconstruction PAULDING COUNTY: U.S. HISTORY

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

bk12c - The Reconstruction Era ( )

The ruins of a Train Depot after the Civil War. Reconstruction

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

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

The Fight over Reconstruction

Reconstruction

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

Reconstruction ( )

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

08.01 A Nation Divided

Reconstruction ( ) US History & Government

Reconstruction

~---- Focus What were the main points of presidential Reconstruction

Lincoln s Assassination

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

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

The Ordeal of Reconstruction. Chapter 22

Chapter 16 Reconstruction and the New South

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

Radicals in Control. Guide to Reading

Reconstruction s Presidents

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

A PLAN TO REBUILD AND TO UNITE

VUS.7d. Political, Economic, and Social Impact

End of the Civil War and Reconstruction

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

Name Date Class KEY TERMS

CHAPTER 22 Reconstruction,

Total War and the devastation of the South

9 US History Student Name: Unit 3: Reconstruction. Unit Questions. (Prepare to answer these questions for unit exam) Thought Jots

Reconstruction: The 2 nd Civil War

RECONSTRUCTION. How do we rebuild the union?

The Politics of Reconstruction

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

Chapter 12. Reconstruction

Post 1865: Effects of the War

Congressional Reconstruction Packet

The Civil War. Reconstruction of the South

RECONSTRUCTION REUNITING A NATION

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

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

The End of the War, Outcomes, and Reconstruction

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

RECONSTRUCTION. American I Mr. Hensley SRMHS

Transcription:

The Radical Republicans & President Lincoln had different beliefs as to how harsh the country should be on the Confederate States reentering the nation. Thaddeus Stevens Charles Sumner President Lincoln RESA: Reconstruction (23 min) 1. Lincoln s Plan of Reconstruction (created in December of 1863): a. Lincoln contended that individual citizens seceded not states. b. 10% Plan (oath of citizenship). c. All states had to accept Emancipation. d. Did not require the formal abolition of slave laws over the southern laborers (Black Codes were permissible). e. Tenn; Arkansas; & Louisiana were readmitted under this plan but Congress later in 1864 denied it to them.

2. Radical Republican Plan of Reconstruction (also known as the Wade-Davis Bill of July 1864) intended to be harsher because they believed that Lincoln s Plan was too lenient on the Confederates. a. Radicals contended the States did secede as a whole, all citizens thus were guilty of secession. b. 50% Plan (oath of citizenship). c. Total abolishment of slavery (adopt the 13th Amendment). d. Adoption of Black Codes was forbidden. e. President Lincoln believed that the abolishment of slavery could only be legal if it were done by the individual states by amending the state constitutions. Lincoln vetoed the Wade-Davis Bill!!!! Ended Slavery in the US and rid the Constitution of the Three-Fifths Clause President Lincoln VETO! Senator Ira Harris, NY introduced the Bill Senator Benjamin Wade, OH Rep. Henry Winter Davis, MD Party Yes No Republicans 18 4 Democrats 0 6 Unconditional Unionist 0 3 Unionist 0 1 swear that you had never borne arms against the Union or supported the Confederacy that is, you had "never voluntarily borne arms against the United States," had "voluntarily" given "no aid, countenance, counsel or encouragement" to persons in rebellion and had exercised or attempted to exercise the functions of no office under the Confederacy

3. Lincoln was assassinated 14 April 1865 at Ford s Theatre in Washington DC by the actor/confederate John Wilkes Booth. 4. Vice President Andrew Johnson takes over. He was from Tennessee, a former slaveholder and a Democrat. He was chosen to run with Lincoln, as a Compromise Candidate, to help get southern votes in the election. He viewed the secessionists as traitors and was for increasing Federal power. Johnson was a very stubborn person who was not well suited for the presidency and did not get along with the Radical Republicans in power in Congress. Pre War Johnson The only southern congressmen to NOT secede with his home state when Civil War occurs President Johnson

5. Johnson s Plan of Reconstruction: a. Very similar to President Lincoln s. b. Required Confederates with $20,000 equity to ask for a presidential pardon. c. Allowed Black Codes (which at the time had been adopted by all former Confederate states except Tennessee). d. Must adopt the 13th Amendment e. This proposed Bill was not adopted! John s Idea EQUITY PLAN $20,000 President Johnson Lincoln s Idea allow Black Codes for gradual equality Radical Republican s Idea (Wade- Davis Bill)

6. 1866 was a Congressional Election year. Andrew Johnson travels the country and gave stump speeches in an effort to help his followers get control in Congress over the Radical Republicans and to get states to vote down the adoption of the proposed 14th Amendment. He fails and the Radical Republicans (like Charles Sumner of Mass. & Thaddeus Stevens of PA) maintain control of Congress. Sumner Stevens Party Total seats (change) Seat percentage Republican Party 173 +37 77.2% Democratic Party 47 +9 21.0% Independents 2 +1 0.9% Conservatives 2 +2 0.9% Totals 224 +31 100.0%

7. Radical Reconstruction Prevails 1866 and the South pays: a. 14th Amendment (also known as the Civil Rights Act) is drafted June 1866-1867 and is adopted over a presidential veto as a law in 1868. b. Military Reconstruction Act is adopted as a law in March of 1867: (1) The former Confederate States of America are placed into 5 military districts each run by a Northern army commander (except the state of Tennessee which was the only Confederate state to accept the 14th Amendment). (2) Each state had to hold Constitutional Conventions in effort to adopt new constitutions. (3) Adopt new State Constitutions in correspondence to the National Constitution. Defines citizenship or rules the opposite of the DredScott Court Case.

7c. The 15th Amendment becomes a law in 1870. This law declared that the right to vote couldn t be denied to any citizen on the basis of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.

7d. Impeachment of President Johnson: (1) Congress creates the Tenure of Office Act in March of 1867 which denies the President of the US the ability to remove members of the presidential cabinet without consent from the US Senate. (2) Johnson fires Edwin M. Stanton (Sec. Of War) Feb. of 1868. (3) Johnson was impeached by the House for violating the law. (4) He was not removed from office; Senate voting fell short by one vote (Senator Edmund Ross was the vote that kept him in office). The vote was 35-19. President Johnson E. M. Stanton E. Ross