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Published byRafe Benson Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 15 Reconstruction
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Lincoln’s Approach 10% Plan Congressional Rep.’s – Wade Davis Bill –50% oath, disenfranchisement of confederate leaders, full rights for freedmen –Pocket Veto
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Johnson’s Initiative Jacksonian Democrat – contempt for NE elites and Southern planter class – no love for blacks (slave owner!) Amnesty for all who take oath (except leaders need presidential pardon) Revoke succession, repudiate debt, ratify 13 th Amendment Ok at first – then Black Codes and Confederate leaders emerge
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Struggling for Economic Independence Land war – won by former plantation class Without land, freedmen had little chance of self-dependency
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Resisting Wage Labor Wage labor = dependency Used to guarantee white supremacy – Freedman’s Bureau – sides with planters
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Congress v. President Johnson veto’s Freedman’s Bureau and Trumbull’s CivilRights Bill Overidden by House
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14 th Amendment Guarantees all people born in U.S. citizens No state can abridge or deprive such privileges Today, used to apply Bill of Rights to states Johnson’s campaign (1866) – Repubs win BIG by “waving the bloody shirt”
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Radical Republicans Abolitionist wing of party Senate – Charles Sumner House – Thaddeus Stevens Goal was to remake southern society
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Radical Reconstruction After 1866 – South still defiant
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Congress Takes Command Reconstruction Act of 1867 (over Veto) South divided into military districts Readmission required guaranteeing blacks right to vote and ratifying 14 th Amendment
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Impeachment Tenure of Office Act – Required senate approval to remove any official they initially approved Johnson removes Secretary of War, Edward M Stanton Impeachment in House, conviction fails by 1 vote in Senate
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Election of 1868 U.S. Grant Republican Nominee Wins and maintains 2/3 of Congress
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15 th Amendment The franchise cannot be denied on color or previous condition of servitude – but – leaves wiggle room for poll taxes etc. Sex not included – women’s rights groups fractured
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Republican Rule in South 1868-1871 – States rejoin and Republicans rule Support by blacks Length of rule differed
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Carpetbaggers and Scalawags Opportunistic northerners, ex- soldiers, businessmen looking to profit, yeoman farmers, German immigrants, anti-secession whites
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African American Leadership Many elite’s freed before Civil War Filled all sorts of govt. positions
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The Radical Program Vision an industrial South never achieved but create a far move modern egalitarian society Education, sexes, taxes
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Black Churches Cultural, social and political center of community
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Sharecropping
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Undoing of Reconstruction Redeemers – Democrats needed Northern acquiescence
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Counterrevolution KKK – Social Club to terrorist organization Nathan Bedford Forrest Failure of Federal Enforcement
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