Civil War and Reconstruction
The Assassination of President Abraham Lincoln and the Calamitous Effect on Reconstruction:
President Andrew Johnson's ascendency was detrimental to Reconstruction efforts:
Johnson was a racist and opposed advancing African-American interests in the South.
He prioritized rapid reintegration of the South, neglecting African-American plights.
Hostile relationship with Radical Republicans in Congress.
Efforts by Radical Republicans in Congress:
Creation of the Freedmen's Bureau:
Federal agency to improve the economic and political well-being of African Americans.
Agents were sent to the South to advance these efforts.
Passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1866:
Advanced African-American rights and freedoms.
Johnson's vetoes were overridden by Congress due to the Radical Republican majority.
Enshrinement of African-American rights through the 14th Amendment:
The slow rise of ex-Confederates in the South led to the sharecropping system:
Black tenant farmers were economically dependent on former plantation rulers.
Implementation of "Black Codes" across the South:
Restricted African Americans' rights to own businesses, testify in court
Rise of the Ku Klux Klan:
Violent group that intimidated and terrorized Black Southerners.
Presidential election of 1876 and the end of Reconstruction:
Samuel Tilden won the national popular vote, but electoral votes were tied.
Southern supporters agreed to allow Rutherford B. Hayes to become president if Federal troops were withdrawn from the South.
Reconstruction ended in 1877, leading to suffering and institutionalized segregation in the South.
Settlement of the West:
Old West period from the Homestead Act of 1862 to the opening of Oklahoma Territory in 1890.
Railroads accelerated Western settlement and integration into the American economy.
Native Americans were displaced and placed in reservations.
Overhunting and habitat fragmentation decimated the North American bison population.
The Assassination of President Abraham Lincoln and the Calamitous Effect on Reconstruction:
President Andrew Johnson's ascendency was detrimental to Reconstruction efforts:
Johnson was a racist and opposed advancing African-American interests in the South.
He prioritized rapid reintegration of the South, neglecting African-American plights.
Hostile relationship with Radical Republicans in Congress.
Efforts by Radical Republicans in Congress:
Creation of the Freedmen's Bureau:
Federal agency to improve the economic and political well-being of African Americans.
Agents were sent to the South to advance these efforts.
Passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1866:
Advanced African-American rights and freedoms.
Johnson's vetoes were overridden by Congress due to the Radical Republican majority.
Enshrinement of African-American rights through the 14th Amendment:
The slow rise of ex-Confederates in the South led to the sharecropping system:
Black tenant farmers were economically dependent on former plantation rulers.
Implementation of "Black Codes" across the South:
Restricted African Americans' rights to own businesses, testify in court
Rise of the Ku Klux Klan:
Violent group that intimidated and terrorized Black Southerners.
Presidential election of 1876 and the end of Reconstruction:
Samuel Tilden won the national popular vote, but electoral votes were tied.
Southern supporters agreed to allow Rutherford B. Hayes to become president if Federal troops were withdrawn from the South.
Reconstruction ended in 1877, leading to suffering and institutionalized segregation in the South.
Settlement of the West:
Old West period from the Homestead Act of 1862 to the opening of Oklahoma Territory in 1890.
Railroads accelerated Western settlement and integration into the American economy.
Native Americans were displaced and placed in reservations.
Overhunting and habitat fragmentation decimated the North American bison population.