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Presidential and Radical Reconstruction

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Title: Presidential and Radical Reconstruction


1
Presidential and Radical Reconstruction
2
Ten Percent Plan
  • Lincolns 10 Plan offered amnesty to all but
    high-ranking Confederates willing to pledge
    loyalty to the Union and accept the abolition of
    slavery
  • When 10 percent of a state's 1860 voters had take
    this oath, that state could reapply to the Union.
  • The Ten Percent Plan was aimed at subverting the
    southern war effort.
  • In Louisiana, former slave owners attempted to
    reassert control over the newly freed black
    population with the aid of occupying forces, but
    the freedmen fought back.

3
Wade-Davis Bill
  • The Wade-Davis Bill, a substitute for Lincolns
    plan, called for stern peace and full rights for
    freedmen.
  • The Bill was passed on July 2, 1864 in Congress,
    but was effectively vetoed by Lincoln, who
    refused to sign the bill before the Congress
    adjourned.
  • The Wade-Davis Bill's conditions for restoring
    the rebellious states to the Union include
  • requiring an oath of allegiance by a majority of
    each state's adult white male population,
  • that the new state governments can only be
    operated by those who never carried arms against
    the union
  • the permanent disenfranchisement of all
    Confederate civil and military leaders.

Senator Wade of Ohio
4
African Freedmen's Inquiry Commission Report
  • The American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission was
    established during the Civil War to determine the
    condition of freed slaves.
  • Appointed in March of 1863 by U.S. Secretary of
    War to "inquire into the condition of the Colored
    population
  • The 1864 report outlines the type or aid the
    commission recommends be provided to freemen.

5
The Freedmen's Bureau
  • The Freedmen's Bureau was charged with
    distributing confiscated land to "loyal refugees
    and freedmen" and with regulating labor contracts
    between freedmen and planters.
  • The Freedmen's Bureau also worked with the large
    number of northern voluntary associations that
    sent missionaries and teachers to the south to
    establish schools for former slaves.
  • In February of 1866, President Andrew Johnson
    vetoed the Freedmen's Bureau Bill
  • In July, Congress renewed the Freedmen's Bureau
    by overriding the Presidential veto with a
    two-thirds majority in both houses.

6
Lincoln's Assassination
  • On April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was
    shot in the head at the Ford's Theater in
    Washington by an actor named John Wilkes Booth.
  • The President was attending Our American Cousin
    with his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln Major Henry R.
    Rathbone, and Clara Harris.
  • The bullet entered through Lincoln's left ear and
    lodged behind his right eye.
  • Lincoln was carried across Tenth Street, to the
    Petersen House, a boarding-house opposite the
    theater, where he died very early the next
    morning.
  • At roughly the same time Lincoln was attacked,
    Lewis Paine, a co-conspirator of Booth, attacked
    Lincoln's Secretary of State, William Henry
    Seward.

7
Andrew Johnson's Plan for Reconstruction
  • In May of 1865, Johnson launched his own plan for
    restoration.
  • In this plan, he automatically offered amnesty to
    all southerners save high-ranking Confederate
    officials and wealthy planters who could only be
    pardoned by presidential order.
  • Johnson appointed provisional governors for the
    confederate states and required them to revoke
    the secession, reject their Confederate debts,
    and ratify the Thirteenth Amendment.
  • Within months all of the former Confederacy had
    met the requirements and had functioning, elected
    governments.

8
Frederick Douglass' Reconstruction
  • Frederick Douglass, a freed slave who became one
    of the most influential African Americans in
    history and eventually became the head of the
    Freedmen's Bureau, explained reconstruction from
    the eyes of a black American.
  • Frederick Douglass detailed the miserable
    conditions of slavery and how the conditions are
    not much better after abolition before discussing
    the Reconstruction in general.

9
Thirteenth Amendment
  • proposed 1865 ratified 1865
  • By 1864 Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, Arkansas,
    and Louisiana all amended their constitutions to
    free their slaves.
  • Abolitionists feared that the Emancipation
    Proclamation would be invalidated at the end of
    the war and that the southern states would react
    by reestablishing slavery.
  • President Lincoln persuaded the Republican
    dominate Congress to prohibit slavery, which they
    did when the Thirteenth Amendment to the
    Constitution of the United States was passed on
    January 31, 1865.

10
Fourteenth Amendment
  • proposed 1866 ratified 1868
  • Congressional Radical Republicans moved quickly
    to establish black civil rights in an amendment
    to the Constitution.
  • The Fourteenth Amendment became a bundle of civil
    rights initiatives.
  • The soul of the amendment declared that "all
    persons born or naturalized in the United States"
    were citizens, that no state could alter "the
    privileges or immunities of citizens" nor could
    they deprive "any person of life, liberty, or
    property, without due process of law."

11
Fifteenth Amendment
  • proposed 1869 ratified 1870
  • The 15th Amendment forbids both the Federal and
    State governments from denying citizens the right
    to vote on the basis of race, color, or "previous
    condition of servitude,"
  • The amendment left the use of poll taxes and
    property or literacy tests to discourage blacks
    from voting, but northern states valued those
    qualifications for use against immigrants and
    indigents.

12
Civil Rights Acts
  • The Civil Rights Act called for complete equality
    for African Americans, which would essentially
    undermine the southern state's Black Codes.
  • The Act also served to limit southern
    representation in Congress. As was to be
    expected, the Act and the Fourteenth Amendment
    received little support from the southern states
    and were viewed as unrealistic and unfair.
  • In 1870, 1871, and 1875 amendments to the
    original Civil Rights Act were made to further
    secure and improve the civil rights of the freed
    slaves.

13
Black Codes
  • Dissatisfied with the new freedoms enjoyed by
    African Americans, several Southern state
    legislatures passed their own laws which served
    to limit the rights afforded to African Americans
    by federal legislation.
  • Black Codes were designed to drive freedmen back
    to the plantations, to restrict their freedom of
    movement, and to deny them equality before the
    law.
  • They set curfews, required blacks who lived in
    town to have white sponsors, and sharply
    restricted their rights of assembly to keep any
    political unification from happening.

14
Reconstruction Acts
  • The Reconstruction Act of 1867, enacted in March
    by the Republican Congress organized the South as
    a conquered land, dividing it (with the exception
    of Tennessee) into five military districts, each
    under the command of a Union general.
  • The Second Reconstruction Act of 1867,
    effectively is an amendment allowing for more
    specific language clearing up points of confusion
    in the earlier Act.

15
Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
  • Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, was in a
    position to hinder Johnson's plans for
    Reconstruction.
  • Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act,
    essentially prohibiting Johnson from firing
    Stanton.
  • In August 1867, Johnson suspended Stanton and
    appointed Ulysses S. Grant to the position.
  • When Congress reconvened in the fall, it
    overruled Johnson's actions and Stanton was
    restored to his position.
  • In 1868, Johnson fired Stanton outright and
    Republican Senators effectively brought 11
    articles of impeachment against President
    Johnson.
  • Although acquitted of all charges, Johnson was
    ineffective in his plans for Reconstruction and
    finished his term quietly.

16
  • Multimedia Citations
  • Slide 2 http//content.answers.com/main/content/w
    p/en-commons/thumb/8/84/220px-Abraham_Lincoln_half
    _length_seated,_April_10,_1865.jpg
  • Slide 3 http//www.impeach-andrewjohnson.com/11Bi
    ographiesKeyIndividuals/BenjaminWadeGammaCrop250.j
    pg
  • Slide 4 http//mac110.assumption.edu/aas/graphics
    /elephantx.jpg
  • Slide 5 http//www.binghamton.edu/ctah/johnson/Fr
    eedman.jpg
  • Slide 6 http//www.americaslibrary.gov/assets/jb/
    civil/jb_civil_lincoln_1_e.jpg
  • Slide 7 http//www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundatio
    n/civil-war/1864/governor-andrew-johnson.jpg
  • Slide 8 http//z.about.com/d/afroamhistory/1/0/7/
    1/photos_douglass.gif
  • Slide 9 http//americanhistory.si.edu/brown/histo
    ry/1-segregated/images/13th-amendment-l.jpg
  • Slide 10 http//www.schoolhousevideo.org/media/MR
    cartoon.jpg
  • Slide 11 http//www.loc.gov/exhibits/odyssey/arch
    ive/05/0521001r.jpg
  • Slide 12 http//lincoln.lib.niu.edu/fimage/lincol
    nimages/fof-6.004.jpg
  • Slide 13 http//www.etsu.edu/cas/history/resource
    s/Private/Faculty/Fac_To1877ChapterDocFiles/Chapte
    rImages/Chapter15BlackCodes.JPG
  • Slide 14 http//www.philaprintshop.com/images/hwr
    econstruction.jpg
  • Slide 15 http//www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects
    /ftrials/impeach/TICKET.jpg
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