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Reconstruction

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Title: Reconstruction


1
Reconstruction
  • Chapter 9

2
After the War
  • Chapter 9 1

3
Lesson 7 ReconstructionPostwar Bell Ringer
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Postwar Conditions
6
Consequences of War for Louisiana
  • What living conditions did surviving Louisianans
    and former slaves face after the Civil War?

7
Louisiana was affected by the war like an
earthquake. No one could avoid the aftershocks.
8
  • The end of the war brought confusion for the
    newly freed slaves.
  • Freedmen (former slaves) wanted a better future,
    while the plantation owners wanted to restore the
    past.
  • The northern states experienced an economic boom,
    while the war-torn South struggled to survive.

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10
Blacks Voting Rights
  • Blacks were still not allowed to vote so a group
    of freedmen went to Lincoln arguing their rights
    and he asked Gen. Banks to allow blacks who owned
    property or who had fought for the Union to vote.

11
Presidential Reconstruction
12
Presidential Reconstruction
  • Reconstruction refers to the steps taken to
    restore the southern states to the Union and to
    rebuild the South.
  • President Lincoln wanted to restore the Union
    rather than punish the South.
  • He announced his plan before the war had ended in
    his Reconstruction Proclamation.

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  • Lincoln considered the Confederate states still
    part of the Union.
  • Lincolns plan was called the 10 Plan.
  • It allowed states to return to the Union as soon
    as 10 of the people who had voted in the
    election of 1860 sign an oath of loyalty.
  • Lincoln put his plan into effect in Louisiana
    during the war.
  • People in occupied Louisiana who declared their
    loyalty to the US were allowed to write a new
    state constitution.

15
  • Louisianas 1864 constitution abolished slavery,
    but it did not grant the freemen the right to
    vote.
  • John Wilkes Booth changed history in a way he did
    not intend.
  • He assassinated President Lincoln to punish him
    for the war, but Booths action hurt the South
    instead.
  • Lincoln planned to bring the southern states back
    into the Union as quickly and easily as possible.

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  • After Lincolns death, the 10 Plan was replaced
    w/ a much harsher congressional plan.

18
Johnson and Reconstruction
19
Johnson and Reconstruction
  • When Vice President Andrew Jackson became
    president after Lincolns death, he faced
    immediate difficulties.
  • He clashed w/ Congress as he tried to continue
    Lincolns Reconstruction plan w/ some revisions.
  • Johnson began to readmit the southern states to
    the Union after voters in a state ratified
    (approved) the 13th Amendment to the
    Constitution.
  • The 13th Amendment abolished slavery.

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  • Juneteenth, also known as Freedom Day or
    Emancipation Day, is when the United States
    officially announced the abolition of slavery.
  • This day took place on June 19, 1865.

22
  • President Johnson also pardoned many former
    Confederate officers, which meant they could get
    their land back.
  • Some of the Republicans in Congress wanted to
    give this land to former slaves. (40 acres and a
    mule!)
  • These Republicans were called Radical
    Republicans b/c they had the most extreme ideas
    about Reconstruction.
  • The Radicals disagreed w/ Johnson on
    Reconstruction they believed that the South
    should be punished for the war.

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  • Congress and President Lincoln had also disagreed
    about Reconstruction, but Lincoln had enough
    power to begin his more forgiving plan.
  • Johnson did not have enough support in Congress
    to carry through his Reconstruction plans.
  • President Johnson was impeached by the House of
    Rep. and came w/in 1 vote of being removed from
    office by the Senate.

25
Reconstruction plans
26
Lincoln vs. Johnson
  • Lincoln
  • Northerners didnt agree on how to rebuild the
    South
  • 10 Plan allowed states to rejoin union after
    10 of 1860 voters signed loyalty oath
  • Louisianas 1864 Constitution ended slavery, but
    forbade freedmen from voting
  • assassination brought harsher reconstruction
    conditions to Louisiana
  • Johnson
  • readmitted Southern states that approved the 13th
    Amend.
  • Republican Radicals wanted to give the land
    owned by Confederate officers to the freed slaves
  • Johnson pardoned former Confederate officers,
    allowing them to keep their land
  • Congress nearly voted Johnson out of office

27
Chapter 9-1 Part 2 Louisianas Postwar Govt
28
Louisianas Postwar Govt
  • In the first statewide election, many former
    Confederates were elected to the legislature.
  • Louisianas Republican Party gained strength
    during Reconstruction
  • This party was made up of free people of color,
    former slaves, and northerers.
  • The governor at this time was James Madison
    Wells.

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The Freedmen
31
  • The Freedmen's BureauAlfred R. WaudJuly 25,
    1868Reproduced from Harper's Weekly
    http//lsm.crt.state.la.us/cabildo/cab11.htm

32
The Freedmen
  • W/ their new freedom, some former slaves moved to
    the towns.
  • Some of them returned to the plantations, but
    others found work as laborers.
  • One of the first actions of the new legislature
    was to pass laws to control former slaves.
  • The free movement of the former slaves offended
    and frightened the whites.

33
  • As a result, the legislature passed Black Codes.
  • These laws restricted the freedmens actions,
    movement, and conduct. Also it included sections
    about rudeness to whites.
  • The other purpose of this legislation was to
    control the work force. The laws passed by the
    legislature required freedmen to sign 1 yr
    contracts to work.
  • If they did not sign contracts, they would be
    forced to do work anyway and were arrested.

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Freedmens Bureau
36
Freedmens Bureau
  • In 1865, the federal govt established the
    Freedmens Bureau. The original purpose was to
    provide aid food, clothing, and basic medical
    care to former slaves and other needy
    southerners.
  • The bureau also established schools.

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Freedmans Rights
  • Congress passed the 14th Amendment to the
    Constitution.
  • The 14th Amendment gave freedmen legal rights and
    citizenship.
  • The southern states were expected to ratify this
    amendment states that refused to ratify this
    amendment would have their representation in
    Congress reduced.

39
  • Louisiana and almost all of the other southern
    states refused to ratify the amendment.
  • Most white southerners did not believe that the
    former slaves were ready for citizenship.

40
Rebuilding the Land
41
Rebuilding the Land
  • Throughout Reconstruction, Louisiana struggled to
    rebuild the towns, railroads, and levees
    destroyed during the Civil War.
  • One of the greatest challenges to rebuilding was
    repairing the states farms.
  • Agriculture had long been Louisianas main
    economic activity, but war had devastated the
    land.
  • Recovering these farms demanded hard work and
    lots of , but landowners had no to hire
    laborers. Slavery was now a thing of the past.

42
  • 2 methods were developed to solve this problem.
  • One was the crop lien system. w/ no cash to pay
    for seeds, tools, or labor, landowners were
    forced to borrow .
  • They had to sign contracts promising to give the
    lenders a of their crops when they were
    harvested.
  • Lenders received their share of the harvests
    first, and the landowners kept whatever was left.

43
  • Often, harvests were poor, and there was little
    left for the landowner after he paid off the
    lien.
  • The other system developed to provide farm labor
    was sharecropping.
  • Since landowners had no to pay wages, they
    promised part of the crop to their workers. The
    workers then farmed the land and gave a portion
    of the harvest to the landowner.

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47
Military Reconstruction
  • Chapter 9 2

48
Lesson 8 Postwar Government of LA Bellringer
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50
Military Reconstruction
  • Congress established a Joint Committee on
    Reconstruction to examine the situation in the
    South.
  • The report found that southerners treated
    freedmen w/ vindictive and malicious hatred. As
    a result, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act
    of 1867.
  • This act placed the southern states under strict
    military control.

51
  • 5 military districts were set up, each commanded
    by a US Army general.
  • This control would be removed only after the
    state ratified the 14th Amendment, wrote a new
    state constitution, and granted suffrage rights
    for all males.
  • Louisiana was apart of District 5. General
    Philip Sheridan was the military commander.
  • This period was known as Military Reconstruction
    or Radical Reconstruction.

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Radical Republicans
55
Radical Republicans
  • Former Confederates could no longer participate
    in the political process. They were forced to
    sit by as the Radical Republicans took control of
    state government.
  • In 1868, Louisiana wrote the new constitution
    required by the 1867 Reconstruction Act.

56
  • This constitution
  • Protected freedmens civil rights
  • Gave suffrage rights to all males over 21
  • 1st in Louisiana to have a bill of rights
  • A Republican newcomer, Henry Clay Warmoth, was
    elected as the new governor.
  • Warmoth was a Union officer during the Civil War
    and was 26 when he became governor.

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  • Oscar J. Dunn was elected as the lieutenant
    governor. He was the 1st black to be elected to
    a statewide office.
  • The Unionists Party formed in Louisiana during
    the Civil War. This party was formed by citizens
    who wanted to remain in the Union during the
    Civil War.
  • People in this party lost control of it to
    northerners who moved south during
    Reconstruction. These northerners where called
    carpetbaggers.

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  • Carpetbaggers were people who lived in the north
    and packed their belongings to head to the south
    during Reconstruction to make a fortune.
  • To white southerners, they were interfering
    outsiders.
  • Warmoth became known as Louisianas carpetbagger
    governor.
  • Southerners gave southern white Unionists that
    joined the Republicans a different name,
    scalawags.

61
  • Scalawags were southerners who supported the
    Republicans during Reconstruction.

62
IX. Louisiana State Lottery Company (Read more
about it on page 227)
63
The Redeemers
64
The Redeemers
  • General Sheridan set up a system to register
    black voters. As a result, many blacks were
    registered to vote.
  • This effect was greatly felt. Almost 50 of the
    Louisiana House and 25 of the Senate were
    African Americans.
  • The former Confederates, members of the
    Democratic Party, were highly upset at these
    figures.

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  • These Democrats were angry about the govt based
    on the votes of former slaves and resented not
    being allowed to vote.
  • They vowed to regain the power they had prior to
    the Civil War. They also wanted to redeem the
    state from the Republicans, carpetbaggers, and
    scalawags.
  • These Democrats became known as Redeemers.

67
  • After the state election in March 1868, violence
    increased.
  • A masked group, the Knights of the White
    Camellia, used threats and physical violence to
    keep the freedmen from voting or forcing them to
    vote for Democrats.
  • Many freedmen were told they would be fired if
    they voted for Republican candidates.
  • Merchants told freedmen to vote right in order
    to buy goods at their stores.

68
A. The Nightriders
  • Ku Klux Klan opposed the Catholic Church and
    freedmens growing power
  • They operated mostly in North LA where few
    Catholics lived
  • Knights of the White Camellia was a secret
    society that used violence and terror in an
    effort to return control of LA to the native
    white population.
  • Both groups were often called nightriders because
    they terrorized at night.

69
B. Fighting Back
  • Republicans formed the Union League
  • Created the Metropolitan Police in New Orleans
  • 1868 election, over 1,000 Republicans were
    murdered in LA
  • Most were freedmen
  • 10 of the black population in Caddo Parish were
    murdered during Reconstruction
  • 25 in Bossier Parish

70
C. State Returning Board
  • Governor Warmoth opposed the nightriders and
    others because they threatened Republican rule.
  • Legislature created the State Returning Board to
    prevent election fraud.
  • It monitored precinct activity and threw out
    votes if corruption was suspected.
  • Soon it became a corrupt look to keep Republicans
    in power by throwing out votes in strong
    Democratic precincts.

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Chapter 9-2 Part 2 The 1872 Election
73
The 1872 Election
  • The legislature impeached Governor Warmoth b/c of
    the controversy surrounding the presidential
    election of 1872 in Louisiana and on corruption.
  • Lieutenant Governor Dunn had died suddenly in
    1871, and state senator, PBS Pinchback became
    lieutenant governor.
  • Pinchback became acting governor when Warmoth
    became impeached. This made Pinchback the 1st
    African American to serve as governor in any
    state.

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B. The Colfax Riot
  • Violence between blacks and whites escalated and
    came to a head at Colfax.
  • Hundreds of freedmen seized control of the town
    and turned the courthouse into a fort.
  • Hundreds of armed whites confronted them on
    Easter Sunday.
  • About 100 freedmen were killed or executed.
  • 3 white died
  • President Grant settled the disputed election by
    ordering the Army to recognize Kellogg was the
    winner.

76
The Colfax Riot
77
Marshall H. Twitchell (Read more about it on
page 236)
78
William Pitt Kellogg
79
D. The White League
  • A powerful statewide organization structured like
    a military to support the Democratic Party.
  • Each parish had a company and officers.
  • Members were mostly former Confederate soldiers.
  • The goal was to drive out Republicans and keep
    freedmen in check.
  • Organization had 14,000 organized members and
    successfully forced Republican parish officials
    out of office.

80
White Leaguers Intimidating Freedmen
81
E. The Coushatta Massacre
  • Red River Parish created by the Republicans
  • Whites dominated the region
  • Used their positions to improve freedmens
    education and economic opportunities and to
    improve their own lives
  • Members of the White League rode into the parish
    seat of Coushatta and capture six Republican
    officials.
  • 5 of the 6 were killed

82
F. The Battle of Liberty Place
  • White League members gathered on Canal Street
    where speakers demanded the removal of the
    Republican governor.
  • Republicans Metropolitan Police assemble about
    500 men and fired cannons on the White Leagues
    barricades.
  • After a day of battle, the police surrendered to
    the White League.
  • Democrats installed John McEnery as governor.
  • Grant dispatched war ships to New Orleans
  • US Army forced the White League to withdraw
  • McEnery stepped aside as governor
  • Strength of White League was growing and the US
    Army was the only thing keeping Republicans in
    power.
  • This encourage White League to become even more
    active across the state.

83
The Liberty Place Monument (Read more about
it on page 238)
84
The John Slidell Memorial (Read more about it
on page 239)
85
The 1876 Elections
86
The 1876 Elections
  • The 1876 election to elect the next governor was
    very controversial.
  • The violence and attempts to control voters made
    the results questionable.
  • The Republican candidate, Stephen Packard claimed
    he won, yet the Democratic candidate, France T.
    Nicholls, claimed he won as well.

87
Francis Redding Tillou Nicholls (Read more
about it on page 240)
88
  • The Republicans sort help from Washington D.C. to
    decide a winner. However, they did not assist in
    the matter.
  • They were busy trying to hold on to the
    presidency.
  • Rutherford B. Hayes, a Republican, and Samuel J.
    Tilden, a Democrat, were running for president.
  • The electoral votes in Florida, Louisiana, and
    South Carolina were too close for them to decide
    a winner.

89
  • The Republicans agreed to end military
    Reconstruction and remove federal troops if the
    states electoral votes went to the Republican
    candidate.
  • The states agreed and President Hayes w/drew the
    last federal troops from the South and
    Reconstruction was over. This agreement was
    known as the Compromise of 1877.
  • As a result of this compromise, the Redeemers
    were starting to regain control of Louisiana.

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