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Chapter 15 Post-Civil War Reconstruction Plans Key terms: 10% Plan; Presidential Reconstruction; Radical Republicans Reconstruction; Freedmen’s Bureau; Andrew Johnson
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Setting the Scene The post-war south lay in utter chaos: Hundreds of thousands dead Labor force gone Economy in the tank Property, land and countryside destroyed Humiliated and defeated Millions of newly freedmen without work, money or land Increase in racial tensions and violence President Lincoln was assassinated as the war ends, leaving a very large question mark in the box marked “ reconstruction ” Enter Andrew Johnson Southerner Self-educated Racist King of the veto The last Jacksonian Democrat
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The Plans (1864) President Abraham Lincoln introduces the 10% Plan Southern states could be readmitted if 10% of the voting population from the election of 1860 swore an oath of allegiance to the Union Voters would draft a new state constitution and state government Southerners except for high-ranking Confederate officers/government officials would receive a full pardon (1864) Wade-Davis Bill is passed Lincoln’s 10% Plan except now 50% of the voting population needed to swear an oath to the Union
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The Plans (1865) With Congress on break, president Johnson introduces his own plan— Presidential Reconstruction “White men alone must manage the south” Southern property is restored Sherman Land is confiscated from freedmen States must pledge an oath to the Union and an accept the 13 th amendment Pardoned most southern elites and those involved in the war Johnson’s policy is widely regarded as sympathetic to the south and very lenient Several Confederate leaders regained their power and land Several states instituted Black Codes to dominate/control freedmen
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The Plans (1866) With the republicans having a majority in both the House and Senate, they had enough power to pass/veto anything Spearheaded by the radical republicans, Congress introduces its own reconstruction plan— Radical Reconstruction/Congressional Reconstruction No former ex-Confederates could hold office Promoted free labor Divided the southern states into 5 different military districts, each governed by a Union general, each ruled by martial law Union troops are used to keep the peace and watch over voter registration Southern states needed to redraft their constitutions, accept the 14 th amendment, provide suffrage to blacks in order to be readmitted into the Union By 1870 all states had been readmitted to the Union
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