History David Ruskosky Chapter 16

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29 Terms

1
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Lincoln unveils the ten percent plan

1863

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John Wilkes Booth assasinates Lincoln, and Congress establishes Freedman's Bureau; 13th amendment is ratified (officially approved)

1865

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Congress passes civil rights act

1866

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Radical republicans pass Military Reconstruction Act

1867

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congress moves to impeach Andrew Johnson; 14th amendment ratified

1868

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15th amendment ratified

1870

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Rutherford B. Hayes defeats Samuel Tilden in conetsted presidential election

1876

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Compromise of 1877 ends Reconstruction

1877

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Another term used to refer to the confederate states

rebel southern states

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Why did southern states rebel and secede from the US

they heavily relied on slavery and were scared that it would get abolished. They also relied heavily on agriculture, so they were against the tarrifs

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Who is Alexander Stephens

he was the vice president of the confederacy, who later joined the congress under Andrew Johnson

12
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"waving the bloody shirt."

a strategy of blaming the devastating Civil War and the violence of its aftermath on the rival party

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what does NWSA stand for

National Woman Suffrage Association, an organization dedicated to ensuring that women gained the right to vote immediately

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"negro misrule"

a term used by the south to refer to the period of time that black people were getting into positions of authority

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who was the invisible empire of the south

the klu klux klan

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Black codes

laws some southern states designed to maintain White supremacy by keeping freed people impoverished and in debt

17
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carpetbagger

a term used for northerners working in the South during Reconstruction; it implied that these were opportunists who came south for economic or political gain

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Compromise of 1877

the agreement between Republicans and Democrats, after the contested election of 1876, in which Rutherford B. Hayes was awarded the presidency in exchange for withdrawing the last of the federal troops from the South

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crop-lien system

a loan system in which store owners extended credit to farmers for the purchase of goods in exchange for a portion of their future crops

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Freedmen's Bureau

the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, which was created in 1865 to ease Black peoples' transition from slavery to freedom

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Ironclad Oath

an oath that the Wade-Davis Bill required a majority of voters and government officials in Confederate states to take; it involved swearing that they had never supported the Confederacy

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Ku Klux Klan

a White vigilante organization that engaged in terroristic violence with the aim of stopping Reconstruction

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Radical Republicans

northern Republicans who contested Lincoln's treatment of Confederate states and proposed harsher punishments

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Reconstruction

the twelve-year period after the Civil War in which the rebel Southern states were integrated back into the Union

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redeemers

a term used for southern White people committed to rolling back the gains of Reconstruction

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scalawags

a pejorative term used for southern White people who supported Reconstruction

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sharecropping

a crop-lien system in which people paid rent on land they farmed (but did not own) with the crops they grew

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ten percent plan

Lincoln's Reconstruction plan, which required only 10 percent of the 1860 voters in Confederate states to take an oath of allegiance to the Union

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Union Leagues

fraternal groups loyal to the Union and the Republican Party that became political and civic centers for Black people in former Confederate states