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The End of the Civil War Reconstruction and Reunification Learning Target: I can explain the post war challenges facing the nation.

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Presentation on theme: "The End of the Civil War Reconstruction and Reunification Learning Target: I can explain the post war challenges facing the nation."— Presentation transcript:

1 The End of the Civil War Reconstruction and Reunification Learning Target: I can explain the post war challenges facing the nation.

2 Set Questions: 1.What does the word emancipate mean? 2.How was the South’s economy and infrastructure affected by the war? 3.What side did African Americans troops fight in large numbers for? 4.After the First Battle of Bull Run both sides realized what? 5.Who is remembered for his march to the sea? 6.Due to the Civil War did the Confederate States gain independence?

3 The War Ends Lee surrenders to Grant Appomattox Court House – 4/29/1865 “The war is over, the rebels are our countrymen again.” -Ulysses S Grant

4 To Continue????? Some Southern leaders want to continue the war Lee decided against this Why did the South lose: Factories Manpower Railroads

5 The War’s Toll Around 620,000 Americans died 260,000 Confederacy 360,000 Union 37,000 African Americans

6 Question How could the North have won if it suffered so many more casualties? Higher Population Immigration

7 The War’s Toll The South was DEVASTATED Factories and Cities were burned Railroad tracks and farms were destroyed Working age men were killed or wounded

8 Lincoln’s Plan Lincoln wanted a “Soft Policy” towards the South Wants to win over Southerners and their leaders Ten Percent Plan As soon as 10% of the State’s voters swore an oath of loyalty to the Federal Government that state could again send representatives to congress

9 Lincoln’s Assassination Assassinated April 14, 1865 at Ford’s Theatre in Washington D.C. by John Wilkes Booth

10 The Freedmen’s Bureau Created by Congress in 1865 Help emergency relief for freed slaves Education Housing Jobs

11 The Thirteenth Amendment Approved January 1865 Bans both slavery and all kinds of forced labor Throughout the ENTIRE nation Question: What is the difference between the 13 th amendment and the Emancipation Proclamation? 13 th Amendment ends slavery everywhere in the country Emancipation Proclamation ends slavery only in the rebelling states

12 The Fourteenth Amendment Granted Citizenship to ALL people born or naturalized in the United States Why did I capitalize ALL? This now includes African Americans. What states would try to take citizenship rights away and from whom? The South was trying to stop African Americans from becoming citizens.

13 The Fifteenth Amendment Prohibits all states from denying voting rights on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Why would southern states try to block African Americans from voting? They did not want the African American voters from electing officials that would help them.

14 Problems in the South Even after the 13 th and 14 th amendment racial discrimination persisted Segregation in public places and schools

15 Segregation

16

17 The Klu Klux Klan The KKK and other radical groups start up in the South Many Southern whites are appalled at now being “equal” to African Americans in the eyes of the law. These groups tried to intimidate African Americans from voting and taking an active role in public life.

18 The Civil Rights Movement Start in the 1950’s by prominent African American social leaders. Civil Disobedience Marches Sit Ins Rosa Parks

19 Martin Luther King Jr.

20 Sit Ins

21 Marches

22 Separate but Equal? – Little Rock 9

23 Integration


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