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Reconstruction and its effects

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Government would Pardon all Confederates except high ranking officials ... 40 acres and a mule. Southern Homestead Act. A few sharecroppers. Make enough money ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconstruction and its effects


1
Chapter 12
  • Reconstruction and its effects

2
Lincolns Reconstruction plan
  • Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
  • 10 Plan
  • Government would Pardon all Confederates except
    high ranking officials and those accused of war
    crimes
  • After 10 of those on the voting polls swore
    allegiance to the Union the confederate state
    could re-enter the Union

3
Lincolns Plan Contd
  • Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, and Virginia
    moved immediately to re-enter the Union
  • Radical Republicans Thought the plan was too
    moderate
  • Thaddeus Stevens wanted African Americans to be
    given full citizenship

4
Lincoln Would Not live to see the plan put into
action
  • John Wilkes Booth
  • Southern Sympathizer
  • Actor
  • Assassinated Lincoln in Fords theater

5
Andrew Johnson Takes the Reins
  • Lincolns VP
  • Became President on Lincolns assassination
  • Wanted to continue Lincolns 10 plan
  • Congress had other plans

6
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7
Wade Davis Bill
  • Gave the power to control reconstruction to
    Congress and not the President
  • Also called for a majority of the voters to
    declare allegiance to the Union and not only 10
  • Lincoln Had vetoed the wade Davis bill by pocket
    veto, however when he was assassinated they
    passed the bill anyway

8
Freedmans Bureau Provided shelter, food,
clothing and Schools for newly freed slaves and
poor whites
9
Congress passed the civil rights act of 1866
  • Gave African Americans Citizenship
  • Forbid the south from passing discriminatory laws
    such as Black Codes
  • Black Codes restored the institute of slavery in
    south
  • A result of this act was the passing of the
    fourteenth Amendment

10
14th Amendment
  • All citizens are provided equal protection of
    the law under the constitution of the United
    States

11
Major Reconstruction Acts  
Legislation Provisions
 
12
Military Districts in South
13
Johnson Impeachment
  • Andrew Johnson Violated the Tenure of Office act
    and Congress tried to have him Impeached

14
Election of 1868
  • Ulysses S. Grant becomes the 18th President of
    the United States

15
(No Transcript)
16
15th Amendment
  • All males over the age of 21 have the right to
    vote regardless of previous condition of servitude

17
South in Disarray
  • Physical devastation
  • Economy destroyed because of confederate money
  • Battle fields needed to be cleaned up to stop
    spread of disease
  • Public works programs

18
Two groups of people began to form in the south
19
Carpetbaggers
20
Scalawags
21
Problems faced by the government for the newly
freed slaves
22
Slaves were unsure what to do with their new
freedoms
  • Allowed to travel without a pass
  • Had no tools to work
  • No land to farm
  • No money to buy these things

23
Reunification of slave families
  • Families were often sold separately
  • Finding families difficult task
  • One man walked 600 miles from Georgia to North
    Carolina to find his wife and children
  • Freedmans bureau helped families reunify
  • Ex-slaves were now allowed to marry

24
Education
  • Slaves must be taught to read and write
  • 80 of freed slaves over the age of 20 were
    illiterate
  • 1877 600,000 blacks were enrolled in elementary
    school

25
Religion
  • Slaves were very spiritual
  • Churches had to be established for religious
    services
  • Baptist and Methodists

26
Politics
  • Hiram Revels was first Black Senator
  • Local And state governments began to see black
    involvement

27
Southern agriculture begins to evolve to a share
cropper system
28
40 acres and a mule
29
Southern Homestead Act
30
Cycle of poverty
Sharecroppers small plot of land and seed from
the landowners
A few sharecroppers Make enough money To become
tenant farmers
Sharecroppers Buy supplies On credit
Sharecroppers use their Money to pay off debts
They plant crops
Sharecroppers sell what Crop is left over for
money
Sharecroppers give a portion Of harvest to
landowner
31
Reconstruction collapses
  • Violence (KKK)
  • Economic pressure
  • Legislative pressure
  • Political power shifts

32
Economic Turmoil
Panic of 1873
33
Currency debate whether to return the American
currency system back to the gold standard
34
Civil Rights setbacks in the Supreme Court
35
Redemption
  • Southern Democrats wanted to redeem the south
  • Wanted to take back over control
  • Wanted to oust the Republicans out of southern
    states

36
Compromise of 1877
  • Southern Democrats wanted three things
  • Withdrawal of federal troops in Louisiana and
    South Carolina
  • Wanted federal money to build a railroad from
    Texas to the west coast to enhance trade
  • Wanted a conservative southerner appointed to the
    cabinet
  • Allowed the Southern Democrats to have Home
    Rule which is what they were after

37
Legacy of Reconstruction
  • Failure
  • Voter discrimination not prohibited
  • No land reform
  • Racial Bias became a National not a regional
    problem
  • Supreme court undermined the 14th and 15th
    Amendments
  • Success
  • Blacks participated in government
  • State Government began solving social problems
  • Churches, Families, and Schools
  • Break up of plantation
  • 14th and 15th Amendments were passed
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