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RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1877. POLITICAL CHANGES IN THE SOUTH  Republican party grows stronger …Increased corruption in Republican party  African Americans.

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Presentation on theme: "RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1877. POLITICAL CHANGES IN THE SOUTH  Republican party grows stronger …Increased corruption in Republican party  African Americans."— Presentation transcript:

1 RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1877

2 POLITICAL CHANGES IN THE SOUTH  Republican party grows stronger …Increased corruption in Republican party  African Americans elected to state office  More opportunities for women  Scalawags & Carpetbaggers are active in the South

3 SOCIAL CHANGES IN THE SOUTH  Women have new roles  Blacks move to cities  Schools & colleges built  Black churches built throughout the South  Ku Klux Klan  Increased discrimination …Black codes …Jim Crow Laws …Grandfather clauses

4 ECONOMIC CHANGES IN THE SOUTH  Sharecropping system set up  Tenant farming  Corrupt railroad speculators

5 Who: landowners and sharecroppers When: after the Civil war Where: in the South What: a system to share land and plant crops that didn’t use money How: landowners provided land, and dictated what crop was grown, in exchange for seed, tools and a place to live How: sharecroppers gave share of harvested crop to landowner, usually bought supplies on credit with high interest rates Consequences: Sharecropper always in debt Sharecropper must promise larger share of next year’s crop, making it impossible for the sharecropper to ever leave

6 PLANS FOR RECONSTRUCTION Lincoln’s Plan  Called 10% Plan (Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction)  10% of a state’s voters had to take a loyalty oath to the Union  New state constitution must abolish slavery and give education to African Americans …Didn’t require social or political equality for African Americans  Willing to pardon former Confederates Johnson’s Plan  Offered pardons and restoration of land to ANY Confederate who swore allegiance to the Union and the Constitution  Each state must ratify 13 th amendment and draft a new constitution that abolishes slavery  Confederate leaders had to write Johnson personally to apply for a pardon

7 CONGRESS’ PLAN FOR RECONSTRUCTION  Called Wade-Davis Bill …Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner pushed for it’s passage  Majority of state’s prewar voters must swear loyalty to Constitution  Demanded guarantee of African American equality  Favored harsh punishments for South  Supported idea of confiscating Confederate land and giving it to freedmen

8 Congress Takes Over Reconstruction Violence against African Americans in the South increases Many southerners do not accept the end of slavery Southern governments enact black codes

9 FEDERAL RECONSTRUCTION LEGISLATION  Wade-Davis Bill: Congress’ version of Reconstruction – vetoed by Lincoln  13 th amendment: abolished slavery (1865)  Freedmen’s Bureau: first federal relief agency in U.S. history; designed to aid black southerners

10  Civil Rights Act of 1866: guaranteed citizenship to blacks  14 th amendment: made African Americans citizens, provided for equal protection for ALL  Reconstruction Act of 1867: radical reconstruction plan from Congress  Tenure of Office Act: law passed by Congress that limited Johnson’s presidential power; he violated this law by firing his Secretary of War

11  15 th amendment: gave black men the right to vote  Enforcement Act: banned use of terror, force or bribery to keep people from voting  Civil Rights Act of 1875: guaranteed equal rights in public places

12 END OF RECONSTRUCTION  Northern support evaporates  Corruption in President Grant’s administration  Tweed Ring steals millions from NYC treasury  Economic Panic of 1873

13 END OF RECONSTRUCTION  Supreme Court chips away at African American freedoms …Slaughterhouse Cases (1873) …U.S. v. Cruikshank (1876)

14 END OF RECONSTRUCTION  Southern whites gain power  Klan intimidation  Redeemers  1874 – Republicans lose control of the House of Representatives and of Federal Reconstruction

15 EFFECTS OF RECONSTRUCTION African Americans  Could vote and own land  Had choice of where to work  Reunited with family  13 th, 14 th, and 15 th amendments gave hope for full inclusion in society  Literacy promoted within African American communities

16 EFFECTS OF RECONSTRUCTION Women’s Suffrage  Gave vote to black men, but fragmented the women’s movement  Disagreement over 15 th amendment including a clause to give women suffrage  1869 – Wyoming Territory became first political unit to extend vote to women

17 EFFECTS OF RECONSTRUCTION State and National Parties  African Americans embrace Republican party, while white Southerners shun it  Democratic party dominates the south  Republican party becomes the party of big business

18 ECONOMIC CHANGES IN THE SOUTH Labor  Loss of slave labor  Workers attempt to find higher-paying jobs, such as jobs on railroads  Few laborers available to pick cotton

19 ECONOMIC CHANGES IN THE SOUTH Farming  Sharecropping emerges, resulting in cycle of debt  Tenant farming emerges  Emphasis on cash crops  Rise of merchants

20 ECONOMIC CHANGES IN THE SOUTH Industry  Railroads rebuilt and extended  Cities grow, along with commerce and population  Focus on early, less profitable stages of manufacturing

21 SUCCESSES OF RECONSTRUCTION  Union restored  Economic growth  14 th amendment  15 th amendment  Freedmen’s Bureau  Education

22 FAILURES OF RECONSTRUCTION  Bitterness in south remains  Industrialization is slow  African Americans denied the right to vote  Cycle of poverty remains  Racist attitudes continue


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