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Scanned Document 1-30-25 at 8.43.01 PM

Effects of the Civil War - Overview

North

  • Returning Soldiers: 800,000 Union soldiers needed jobs.

  • Political Issues: Disagreement on how to reintegrate the South into the Union.

South

  • Economic Devastation:

    • 2/3 of Southern railroads destroyed.

    • Cities leveled; financial system in ruins.

    • Confederate currency rendered worthless; banks closed.

  • Societal Changes:

    • Emergence of a new class: Freedmen.

Environmental Damage

  • Farms turned into battlefields, leading to destruction.

  • Forests cleared for fortifications.

  • Livestock losses due to war or consumption as food.

Reconstruction

Definition

  • Reconstruction: The process of rebuilding the physical, political, and social structures of the South post-Civil War.

Lincoln's Plan

  • Ten Percent Plan: Southern states could rejoin the Union after 10% of voters swore loyalty.

  • Required abolishment of slavery and new government formation with Congressional representation.

  • Offered amnesty to loyal Confederates but excluded former leaders.

Johnson's Presidency

Policies and Opposition

  • Former Confederates elected to Congress; introduction of "Black Codes" to restrict Freedmen rights (e.g., voting, job opportunities).

  • Radical Republicans opposed President Johnson, pushing for Civil Rights Act.

  • Reconstruction Act of 1867: Military rule imposed on non-compliant states until the ratification of the 14th Amendment.

Key Amendments

  • 13th Amendment (1865): Abolished slavery.

  • 14th Amendment (1868): Defined citizenship, protecting rights of all born/naturalized.

  • 15th Amendment (1870): Right to vote cannot be denied based on race.

Post-Reconstruction Changes

New Southern Society

  • Three main groups: Scalawags (supporting Republicans), Carpetbaggers (Northerners profiting from Reconstruction), and African Americans (gaining political rights).

  • Conservatives resisted reforms, forming groups like the KKK to threaten progress.

  • Economic Shifts: Rise of sharecropping among Freedmen, leading to cycles of poverty.

Aftermath of Reconstruction

  • Loss of faith in Republican leadership due to corruption.

  • Disputed Election of 1876: Compromise of 1877 ended Reconstruction and withdrew troops from the South.

Post-Reconstruction Restrictions

New Laws Enforced

  • Voting Barriers: Poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses implemented to disenfranchise African Americans.

  • Segregation: Established by Jim Crow Laws, enforcing separation in public spaces.

Economic Developments in the New South

  • Shift toward industrialization with natural resource utilization.

  • Transition into a more diverse economy by 1900.

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