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RECONSTRUCTION

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Title: RECONSTRUCTION


1
RECONSTRUCTION
  • 1865 - 1877

2
QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
  • Who should be in charge of Reconstruction?
  • How should the southern states be treated?
  • What political, economic, and social rights
    should be granted to the freedmen and how should
    these rights be enforced?

3
RECONSTRUCTION PLANS
4
LINCOLNS PLAN
  • President should be the director
  • Southern states never seceded no need to
    readmit
  • Reconstruction should be lenient (easy fair)
  • Southerners should be encouraged to take loyalty
    oath to the U.S. government
  • 10 Plan 10 of state must pledge loyalty
    before being pardoned
  • Emancipation Proclamationdead before
    Reconstruction can begin.

5
JOHNSONS PLAN
  • Continue Lincolns plan
  • Pardon to Southerners who took oath of allegiance
    to the Union and agreed to abolish slavery
  • Southern states must reject secession, separate
    from any the Confederate claims/debt.
  • Southern states must ratify the 13th Amendment

6
CONGRESSIONAL PLAN
  • Reject Presidential plans
  • Congress should direct Reconstruction
  • Southern states had seceded and must be
    readmitted to the Union by the Congress
  • South must be punished severely
  • Republicans should remain in power and prevent
    Democrats, especially Southern Democrats, from
    regaining power
  • Rights of the freedmen must be protected!

7
President Johnson v. Congress
  • Johnson disagreed with Congressional plans and
    vetoed key legislation
  • Freedmens Bureau and Civil Rights Act of 1866
  • Congress passed 2 laws to limit Johnsons
    involvement in Reconstruction
  • Tenure of Office Act
  • required Presidential dismissals to be approved
    by Senate
  • Command of the Army Act
  • limited Presidents power as Commander in Chief

8
IMPEACHMENT OF ANDREW JOHNSON
  • House of Representatives
  • Brought up charges (11 counts) including
    violations of the Tenure of Office Act and
    Command of the Army Act
  • To impeach is to accuse so President Johnson
    was impeached
  • Senate
  • Conducted the trial and served as the jury
  • 2/3 majority vote needed to remove from office

9
Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
  • Decision
  • Johnson was found not guilty by a 1 vote margin
  • (one vote short of 2/3 votes needed to impeach)
  • 7 Republicans martyred themselves by voting not
    guilty saved the President but sacrificed their
    own political futures
  • Importance
  • Upheld the principle of presidential independence
    of Congress, BUT it did severely restrict the
    powers of the Presidency for years to come

10
CONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION
  • Civil Rights Act of 1866
  • gave equal rights to African Americans,
    enforced by federal troops
  • Freedmens Bureau Act of 1866
  • provided services to former slaves food,
    clothing, medical care, education, job placement,
    reunite families
  • 14th Amendment (1868)
  • granted citizenship to African Americans,
    guaranteed equal protection of the laws, voided
    the Confederate debt, disqualified most former
    Confederates from holding office unless pardoned
    by Congress

11
RADICAL REPUBLICAN RECONSTRUCTION
  • First Reconstruction Act (1867)
  • Established 5 military districts under the
    command of a military governor
  • Conditions set for being readmitted to the Union
  • Hold open elections for constitutional convention
  • Must guarantee African American suffrage
  • State legislatures must ratify the 14th Amendment
  • After 1869, states must ratify the 15th Amendment

12
RECONSTRUCTION GOVERNMENTS IN THE SOUTHERN STATES
  • Controlled by
  • Carpetbaggers
  • Northerners who moved south after the war to take
    advantage of opportunities to make money
  • Scalawags
  • Southerners who were loyal to the Union and
    supported the Republican party
  • African Americans
  • Started at the top of the political ladder
    could vote and hold public office

13
Criticism of State Reconstruction Governments
  • Corrupt
  • Graft
  • Extravagant spending led to increased debt

14
Accomplishments of State Reconstruction
Governments
  • State constitutions guaranteed
  • civil liberties,
  • provided universal male suffrage,
  • abolished imprisonment for debt
  • Began to rebuild the South
  • Introduced free, compulsory public education for
    all children

15
SOUTHERN WHITES REGAINED CONTROL
  • Increased number of Southern White voters
  • Decreased Northern interest in problems of
    African Americans
  • interests turned to industrialization and
    urbanization
  • Ku Klux Klan
  • frightened African Americans from exercising
    their voting rights
  • Presidential election of 1876 brought an end to
    Reconstruction

16
COMPROMISE OF 1877
  • Disputed Electoral votes in several states
    including Florida made it impossible for the
    Electoral College to choose a President
  • Compromise in House of Representatives
  • The Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayes
    would be President and he promised the Democrats
    that he would remove the federal troops from the
    southern states and officially end Reconstruction

17
LASTING RESULTS OF THE CIVIL WAR AND
RECONSTRUCTION
  • Added to the Constitution
  • Amendments 13, 14, 15
  • Supremacy of the Federal Government over States
    Rights
  • Presidential powers
  • Increased during wartime
  • Development of the Solid South rejection of
    the Republican party and solid support of the
    Democratic party (until 1972 Nixon)

18
Results - continued
  • Economic development of the South
  • diversification of agriculture (not just cotton!)
  • development of industry the New South
  • Sharecropping to fill the labor shortage
  • Continued discrimination against African
    Americans under State laws (after 1877)
  • Voting rights denied by poll tax and literacy
    tests
  • Jim Crow laws established segregation based on
    race
  • African Americans were not allowed to join the
    Democratic party or labor unions
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