Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRobert Jones Modified over 9 years ago
1
Reconstruction
2
10 Percent Plan As soon as ten percent of state’s voters took a loyalty oath to the Union, the state could set up a new government If a state’s constitution abolished slavery and provided education for African Americans, the state would regain representation in Congress
3
Andrew Johnson Took over as President after the death of Abraham Lincoln
4
Andrew Johnson Wanted to follow Lincoln’s reconstruction plan From Tennessee and sympathetic to the South Wanted to bring the South back into the Union without delay
5
Wade Davis Bill Required that a majority of s state’s prewar voters swear loyalty to the Union before the process of restoration could begin Demanded equality for African Americans
6
Radical Republicans Wanted to punish former slaveholders and leaders of the Confederacy Wanted to give African Americans full citizenship and the right to vote
7
Thaddeus Stevens Leader of the Radical Republicans who sought to destroy the power of the former slaveholder
8
Freedman’s Bureau A federal agency set up to help former slaves and poor whites after the Civil War by distributing food and clothing Continued efforts until 1872
9
Jim Crow Laws Discriminatory laws passed throughout the post-Civil War South Severely restricted African American lives
10
Ku Klux Klan Goal was to restore white supremacy by preventing African Americans from exercising their political rights
11
Civil Rights Act of 1866 Granted citizenship and equal protection under the law to African Americans
12
Thirteenth Amendment Freed slaves from masters “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted shall exist within the United States”
13
Fourteenth Amendment Made all people equal under the law Stated southern states could not deny former slaves the right to vote Said former Confederate leaders could not hold office
14
Reconstruction Act of 1867 Divided former Confederate states into 5 military districts Voters, including African Americans, elected delegates to write a new state constitution
15
Reconstruction Act of 1867 States had to allow African Americans the right to vote and pass the 14 th amendment to be allowed back into the Union
16
Tenure of Office Act Stated that the President could not remove cabinet officers during the term of the president who appointed them without approval from the Senate
17
Johnson’s Impeachment Radical Republicans felt that Johnson was not carrying out his obligation to enforce the Reconstruction Act Johnson ignored the Tenure of Office Act and fired his Secretary of War
18
Johnson’s Impeachment House of Representatives impeached him but Senate fails to convict him by one vote
20
Fifteenth Amendment Guarantees people the right to vote regardless of race
21
Scalawags A white Southerner who joined the Republican Party after the Civil War Seen as Southern traitors
22
Carpetbaggers A Northerner who moved to the South after the Civil War Southerners resented them for taking southern money back to the north
23
Sharecroppers A system in which land owners give farm workers land, seed, and tools in return for a part of the crops they raise
24
Tennant Farmers System in which farm workers supply their own tools and rent farmland from owners
25
Whiskey Ring Scheme by tax collectors and whiskey distillers to cheat the government out of tax money Was the most serious of scandals during Ulysses S. Grant’s presidency
26
Election of 1876 Rutherford B. Hayes elected after a compromise was reached to end Reconstruction Known as the Compromise of 1877
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.