Reconstruction Lesson 2 Reconstruction Changes the South.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Warm up THE PERIOD AFTER THE CIVIL WAR (FROM ) IS KNOWN AS “RECONSTRUCTION”. KNOWING WHAT YOU HAVE LEARNED ABOUT THE CIVIL WAR, WHAT DO YOU THINK.
Advertisements

Chapter 6 Civil War and Reconstruction
Essential Question ► What was the impact of southern Reconstruction?
A very large farm. A person who fought to end slavery.
RECONSTRUCTION AND ITS AFTERMATH: The South During Reconstruction.
Reconstruction and the Changing South
The years after the Civil War
Reconstruction What it was like in the South…. Civil War
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South Reconstruction – The period following the Civil War in which Congress passed laws designed to rebuild the country.
Review for Test on Reconstruction. In simple terms, what did the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments provide? 13-abolish slavery or freedom.
Chapter 18 The Reconstruction Years. Drill What was “the Reconstruction”? “The Reconstruction” is the name for the period after the end of the Civil War.
CHAPTER 5 NOTES RECONSTRUCTION.
(23 Note Cards Required) SSUSH10The student will identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. SSUSH11 The student will describe.
Reconstruction and the New South
Chapter 3 Note Cards th Amendment Declared all persons born or naturalized in US as citizens All citizens entitled to “equal protection of the.
Reconstruction Standard 4.6. What is Reconstruction? Reconstruction –  a time period after the Civil War  the federal government protected the rights.
What term refers to the plan for rebuilding the South after the Civil War?
Section 17.4: Reconstruction Ends. In February 1870, the 15 th Amendment guaranteed suffrage, or the right to vote, to all citizens except women and American.
Reconstructing Society
Reconstructing Society Ch 12 Sect 2 Pg 383. Conditions in the Postwar South South had to physically rebuild the region. Property values plummeted Investors.
RECONSTRUCTION- PART 2 Chapter 8, Section 2. AFRICAN AMERICANS GAIN POWER During Reconstruction, there was a growth of the Republican Party in the South.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Reconstruction in the South RECONSTRUCTION IN THE SOUTH CHAPTER 12 SECTION 2.
Reconstruction: ©2012, TESCCC. Reconstruction was a period immediately after the Civil War of rebuilding the Southern states gradually bringing.
Reconstruction Section 1 “Reconstruction Plans”
RECONSTRUCTION Unit 1 Section 3. RECONSTRUCTION The process of restoring, rebuilding, and readmitting the Confederate States to the United States.
Reconstruction of the South. The Civil War  War between the North (Union) and South (Confederacy)  The South wanted:  To preserve their way.
Chapter 4 Lesson 4.  When the Civil War finally ended, it was clear that peace had not come easily. More than 600,000 soldiers had died. Many others.
R ECONSTRUCTION IN THE S OUTH O BJECTIVES Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments Discuss how freedmen adjusted to.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reconstruction in the South WAS RECONSTRUCTION A SUCCESS OR FAILURE?
Warm up THE PERIOD AFTER THE CIVIL WAR (FROM ) IS KNOWN AS “RECONSTRUCTION”. KNOWING WHAT YOU HAVE LEARNED ABOUT THE CIVIL WAR, WHAT DO YOU THINK.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Reconstruction in the South Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments. Discuss.
MONDAY. STANDARDS/OBJECTIVES   Explain the purpose and motivations of subversive groups during Reconstruction and their rise to power after the.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reconstruction in the South.
AFRICAN AMERICANS TRY TO BETTER THEMSELVES THE POST CIVIL WAR WORLD.
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. The Reconstruction.
Reconstruction. What was Reconstruction? Reconstruction lasted from Reconstruction was the nation’s attempt to reunite the country and rebuild.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Reconstruction in the South Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments. Discuss.
Reconstruction in the South Chapter 12 Section 2.
Reconstruction of the South. The Civil War War between the North (Union) and South (Confederacy) The South wanted:  To preserve their way of.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reconstruction.
The New South SWBAT:. Economic changes End of the Plantation System – Now: sharecroppers and tenant farmers – a landowner allows a tenant to use the land.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reconstruction in the South.
RECONSTRUCTION ECONOMY Chapter 12 Section 2. Scalawags and Carpetbaggers Scalawags found allies in northern white or black men who relocated to the South.
Reconstruction What were the plans for reconstruction? Reconstruction = the process of readmitting the former Confederate states to the Union.
Reconstruction Unit 1 Section 2 Part 3. A. The South After the War The Post-Civil War Period is known as Reconstruction The Post-Civil War Period is known.
Reconstruction the period of rebuilding the South and restoring the Southern states to the Union after the Civil War.
Reconstruction The time after the Civil War ( ) the country was being rebuilt. Have you ever had a bad breakup and then wanted to get back together?
Reconstruction Vocabulary
Reconstruction.
Reconstruction and Daily Life
Reconstruction of the South
Aim: What were the immediate effects of Reconstruction?
Racial Advancements and Tensions
The New South.
Reconstruction Vocabulary.
Reconstruction and the Changing South
Warmup Vocab Sharecropper Ku Klux Klan Freedman’s Bureau Black Codes
Notes 8.2 Reconstruction Changes the South
USHC Standard 3: The student will demonstrate an understanding of how regional and ideological differences led to the Civil War and an understanding of.
12-3 Did you know? The name Ku Klux Klan comes from the Greek word “kuklos,” meaning circle. The group thought of the circle as a symbol of creativity.
Reconstruction in the South
Objectives Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments. Discuss how freedmen adjusted to freedom and the South’s new economic.
Objectives Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments. Discuss how freedmen adjusted to freedom and the South’s new economic.
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South
Essential Question: What were the success & failures of federal attempts to reconstruct the Union after the Civil War ( )? Warm-Up Question: Which.
Every relationship can be fixed!
Essential Question: What did the following amendments do: 13th 14th
Section 3: The South During Reconstruction
Scalawags White southern Republicans, known to their enemies as “Scalawags”, made up the largest groups of representatives to the Radical Reconstruction.
Presentation transcript:

Reconstruction Lesson 2 Reconstruction Changes the South

Learning Objectives Explain how Republicans gained control of southern state governments. Analyze how freedmen adjusted to freedom and the role of the Freedmen’s Bureau. Evaluate the South’s new economic system and its impact on poor farmers. Summarize efforts to limit African Americans’ rights and the federal government’s response.

Reconstruction Lesson 2 Reconstruction Changes the South Key Terms Scalawags carpetbaggers segregation integration sharecropping Share-tenancy tenant farming Ku Klux Klan Enforcement Acts

Republicans Dominate Government Before the Civil War, a limited number of powerful men had controlled the South. In the wake of the war, a very basic question needed to be resolved. Who would gain power and how would they use it? How this question was answered at the time would have both immediate and lasting consequences.

Republicans Dominate Government African Americans at the Polls Scalawags and Carpetbaggers Women and Reconstruction A Public School System Takes Shapes Corruption Hinders Reconstruction

Republicans Dominate Government By 1870 all former Confederate state are back in the Union. African Americans win many political offices Superintendents, sheriffs, mayors, coroners, police chiefs, and representatives in state legislatures 2 Senators and 14 Congressmen Scalawag – white Southern Republican Carpetbaggers – northern people who relocated to the South to improve their life or help freedmen Republicans abandoned women as they believe they couldn’t fight for African American and women at same time. Women helped freedmen – especially in education Segregation – separation of the races (schools) Integration – combining the separate schools – unpopular Did get tax supported schools – not just rich Corruption hurt also – many scandals from rebuilding railroads

Republicans Dominate Government Radical Republican members of South Carolina's first legislature after the war

Republicans Dominate Government Analyze Information Which states likely offered the most protections for African Americans in their state constitutions?

Freed People Rebuild Their Lives For newly freed African Americans, the importance of such issues as public corruption was matched by the importance of trying to work out new social institutions and economic relationships. Some freedmen deliberately moved away from the plantation, even if the owner had been a generous person. As one minister put it, “As long as the shadow of the great house falls across you, you ain’t going to feel like no free man and no free woman.”

Freed People Rebuild Their Lives Jobs and Family The Role of Public Institutions

Freed People Rebuild Their Lives Before emancipation, few African Americans had been able to legally wed under Southern state laws. During Reconstruction, families could formalize their relationships.

Land Distribution in the South Many of the South’s problems resulted from the uneven distribution of land. As an agricultural region, the South’s wealth was defined by land ownership. Yet, in 1860, the wealthiest 5 percent of white southerners owned almost half the region’s land. Relatively few people held the rest of the land. In fact, more than 90 percent of southern land was owned by only 50 percent of the people. This meant that even before the war, the South had a large number of white citizens with little or no land. After the war, millions of landless southern white people were competing with millions of landless African American people for work as farm laborers on the land of others.

Freed People Rebuild Their Lives Legalize and celebrate marriages, build homes, make choices where they could live Were restricted by black codes on what work they could do. Did much of the same work – hard labor for low pay – Freedman Schools had over 150,000 adults and children learning to read. Doubled in three years Black colleges formed by the Freedman’s Bureau African American Churches formed (important today) Besides social – political rallying points.

Land Distribution in the South Sharecropping and Share-Tenancy Tenant Farming

Land Distribution in the South Analyze Data Based on this graph, how did overall land ownership patterns in the South probably change during the time shown?

Land Distribution in the South African American farmers who sold their crops often found the value lower than anticipated.

Land Distribution in the South Many problems resulted from the uneven distribution of land Blacks and poor whites owned very little land Thaddeus Steven’s suggested confiscating land and giving to Freedman (Sherman). Rich whites own land, Freedman need jobs. Hmmm….. Sharecropping – owner picked crop, paid for all, gave place to live and in return “shared” crop. Always charged too much. Black code said you couldn’t leave land if you owed money – slavery? Share-tenancy – worker picked what crop – more control – maybe save some money. Tenant farming – farmer paid cash to rent land – choose and paid for everything else – had to have some money and farm equipment

Changes in the South Spark Violence The struggle to make a living in a region devastated by war led to fierce economic competition. Economic uncertainty in turn fueled the fire of white southerners’ outrage. Already resentful of the Republican takeover of local politics and of occupation by federal troops, white southerners from all economic classes were united in their insistence that African Americans not have full citizenship.

Changes in the South Spark Violence The Ku Klux Klan The Federal Response

Changes in the South Spark Violence Members of the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacists terrorized freed African Americans and their supporters during Reconstruction.

Changes in the South Spark Violence White Southerners tried to keep freedman down Ku Klux Klan – formed in Tennessee in 1866, used violence and threat of violence to keep blacks as second class citizens. Attacked black teachers, schools, churches, minister, politicians and anyone who stood up for themselves. Grant passes the Enforcement Acts - federal offense to interfere with voting. Would send troops to SC and Sheridan to LA (White League) (1956) Smolder hat but would rise again in coming decades.

Quiz: Republicans Dominate Government Most public school systems in the South were A. higher quality than schools in other parts of the nation. B. well-funded due to special education bonds issued by state governments. C. operated by carpetbaggers. D. segregated by race.

Quiz: Freed People Rebuild Their Lives What did many African American men, women, and children gain in the newly freed South? A. educational opportunities B. land and property C. religious faith D. suffrage

Quiz: Land Distribution in the South Which method of farming in the South offered poor white and African American farmers the most control of their labor and harvest? A. plantation farming B. sharecropping C. share-tenancy D. tenant farming

Quiz: Changes in the South Spark Violence What was an immediate goal of the Ku Klux Klan? A. to break the power of the Republican Party B. to drive African Americans from the South C. to enslave African Americans D. to prevent African Americans from voting