Chapter 18 - Reconstruction
Reconstruction
1865-1877
A period after the Civil War to rebuild infrastructure and reunite the US
People disagreed over whether to help or punish the Confederacy
Made the Southerners very angry
Ten Percent Plan
1863 - Proposed by Abraham Lincoln
The Confederacy was forced to emancipate their slaves and swear loyalty to the Union
If 10% of the citizens of a state swore their loyalty, the Union would recognize their gov’t and allow them to join the US
Wade-Davis Bill
Radical Republicans were angry at Lincoln for being too lenient on the Confederacy
This bill forced the Confederate states to emancipate their slaves and for 50% of their citizens to swear loyalty (compared to 10%)
Lincoln didn’t sign off on this bill
Andrew Johnson
Didn’t approve of secession
Became Lincoln’s VP in 1864
Became President in 1865
The Radical Republicans resisting him eventually led to Johnson’s impeachment trial
Thirteenth Amendment
Abolished slavery
Ratified in 1865
Signified the end of the abolition movement
Radical Republicans
Wanted to punish the Confederacy and help freed African Americans
“Waving the bloody shirt” meant the Radical Republicans blaming the Democrats for the Civil War in order to gain more political power
Supported the passing of the 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
Civil Rights Bill
Written by the Radical Republicans
Would make freedmen citizens of the US
Would lessen influence of Black Codes
Vetoed by Andrew Johnson
Freedmen’s Bureau
1865-1871
Response to Black Codes
Led by Oliver O. Howard
Aimed to provide freedmen with basic necessities to support themselves (ex. education)
Struggled to find resources and staff
Was vetoed by Andrew Johnson
Sharecropping
Tenant farming
Done by former slaves and poor whites
Farmers would receive a portion of their harvest as income
Basically the same conditions as slavery
Thaddeus Stevens
1866 - Radical Republican takeover of Congress
Leader of Radical Republicans in House
Committee on Reconstruction
Charles Sumner was the leader of Radical Republicans in Senate
Wanted to punish the South with Reconstruction
Committee on Reconstruction
1865
Provided oversight on Reconstruction
Led by Thaddeus Stevens
Achievements included the 14th Amendment + military reconstruction
Fourteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1868
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 provided citizen rights for freedmen
Clarified citizen status for Americans
The federal government would have the responsibility of monitoring states’ treatment of citizens
Aimed to punish important Confederate leaders
Ex parte Milligan
1866
Military tribunals weren’t allowed to try citizens because civilian courts were open
Military Reconstruction was ignored by Congress
Military Reconstruction Act
1867
Combined seceded states into 5 military districts
Would be monitored by Union generals and armies
Scalawags were Southerners that cooperated
Carpetbaggers were Northerners that traveled to the South to reap benefits
Tenure of Office Act
1867
Created by the Radical Republicans to get rid of Andrew Johnson
Congress must consent to firings
Because Johnson fired Edwin Stanton without the approval of Congress, he was impeached
Impeachment
Used as a political weapon
Johnson violated the Tenure of Office Act
1868 - Impeachment of Johnson
Because there was 1 vote short of ⅔ majority, Johnson was not removed
Chinese Exclusion Act
1882
Influx of Chinese immigrants during Gold Rush
Chinese worked on transcontinental railroad, taking over the economy + taking away jobs
Barred Chinese immigration for 10 years
Louis Agassiz
Came to the US to give lectures
Proposed the ice age + glaciers
Believed in natural selection + that African Americans are inferior
Justified Southern racism
Racism based on Darwinism
Fifteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1870
Legalized African American male suffrage
Women suffragists protested
Ku Klux Klan
1865
Used intimidation + terrorism against African Americans (burning, lynching, murder, etc.)
Targeted supporters of Reconstruction
Compromise of 1877
1877
Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) vs. Samuel B. Tilden (Democrats)
Hayes won, putting Florida + South Carolina + Louisiana back under Home Rule
Withdrawing the military from the South signified the end of Reconstruction
Put former slave masters back in power
Redeemers
Composed of Southern white Democrats
After the Union army left, they took control of the state governments
Home Rule + Solid South
Disenfranchisement
With Southern leaders back in power, they removed African American voting rights
Literacy tests and poll taxes prevented African Americans from voting
Jim Crow
Symbolized Southern racism
Restrictions on African American freedom + rights
Segregation laws banned African Americans from public facilities
BIG PICTURE
Reconstruction - Healing wounds of Civil War
Political battles - Democrats vs. Republicans + executive vs. legislative
Radical Republicans - Reforms → Punish South
Racism + weak Southern economy → Difficult change
Unfair laws + bad economy + no freedom/rights → Hurt freedmen
Reconstruction
1865-1877
A period after the Civil War to rebuild infrastructure and reunite the US
People disagreed over whether to help or punish the Confederacy
Made the Southerners very angry
Ten Percent Plan
1863 - Proposed by Abraham Lincoln
The Confederacy was forced to emancipate their slaves and swear loyalty to the Union
If 10% of the citizens of a state swore their loyalty, the Union would recognize their gov’t and allow them to join the US
Wade-Davis Bill
Radical Republicans were angry at Lincoln for being too lenient on the Confederacy
This bill forced the Confederate states to emancipate their slaves and for 50% of their citizens to swear loyalty (compared to 10%)
Lincoln didn’t sign off on this bill
Andrew Johnson
Didn’t approve of secession
Became Lincoln’s VP in 1864
Became President in 1865
The Radical Republicans resisting him eventually led to Johnson’s impeachment trial
Thirteenth Amendment
Abolished slavery
Ratified in 1865
Signified the end of the abolition movement
Radical Republicans
Wanted to punish the Confederacy and help freed African Americans
“Waving the bloody shirt” meant the Radical Republicans blaming the Democrats for the Civil War in order to gain more political power
Supported the passing of the 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
Civil Rights Bill
Written by the Radical Republicans
Would make freedmen citizens of the US
Would lessen influence of Black Codes
Vetoed by Andrew Johnson
Freedmen’s Bureau
1865-1871
Response to Black Codes
Led by Oliver O. Howard
Aimed to provide freedmen with basic necessities to support themselves (ex. education)
Struggled to find resources and staff
Was vetoed by Andrew Johnson
Sharecropping
Tenant farming
Done by former slaves and poor whites
Farmers would receive a portion of their harvest as income
Basically the same conditions as slavery
Thaddeus Stevens
1866 - Radical Republican takeover of Congress
Leader of Radical Republicans in House
Committee on Reconstruction
Charles Sumner was the leader of Radical Republicans in Senate
Wanted to punish the South with Reconstruction
Committee on Reconstruction
1865
Provided oversight on Reconstruction
Led by Thaddeus Stevens
Achievements included the 14th Amendment + military reconstruction
Fourteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1868
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 provided citizen rights for freedmen
Clarified citizen status for Americans
The federal government would have the responsibility of monitoring states’ treatment of citizens
Aimed to punish important Confederate leaders
Ex parte Milligan
1866
Military tribunals weren’t allowed to try citizens because civilian courts were open
Military Reconstruction was ignored by Congress
Military Reconstruction Act
1867
Combined seceded states into 5 military districts
Would be monitored by Union generals and armies
Scalawags were Southerners that cooperated
Carpetbaggers were Northerners that traveled to the South to reap benefits
Tenure of Office Act
1867
Created by the Radical Republicans to get rid of Andrew Johnson
Congress must consent to firings
Because Johnson fired Edwin Stanton without the approval of Congress, he was impeached
Impeachment
Used as a political weapon
Johnson violated the Tenure of Office Act
1868 - Impeachment of Johnson
Because there was 1 vote short of ⅔ majority, Johnson was not removed
Chinese Exclusion Act
1882
Influx of Chinese immigrants during Gold Rush
Chinese worked on transcontinental railroad, taking over the economy + taking away jobs
Barred Chinese immigration for 10 years
Louis Agassiz
Came to the US to give lectures
Proposed the ice age + glaciers
Believed in natural selection + that African Americans are inferior
Justified Southern racism
Racism based on Darwinism
Fifteenth Amendment
Ratified in 1870
Legalized African American male suffrage
Women suffragists protested
Ku Klux Klan
1865
Used intimidation + terrorism against African Americans (burning, lynching, murder, etc.)
Targeted supporters of Reconstruction
Compromise of 1877
1877
Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) vs. Samuel B. Tilden (Democrats)
Hayes won, putting Florida + South Carolina + Louisiana back under Home Rule
Withdrawing the military from the South signified the end of Reconstruction
Put former slave masters back in power
Redeemers
Composed of Southern white Democrats
After the Union army left, they took control of the state governments
Home Rule + Solid South
Disenfranchisement
With Southern leaders back in power, they removed African American voting rights
Literacy tests and poll taxes prevented African Americans from voting
Jim Crow
Symbolized Southern racism
Restrictions on African American freedom + rights
Segregation laws banned African Americans from public facilities
BIG PICTURE
Reconstruction - Healing wounds of Civil War
Political battles - Democrats vs. Republicans + executive vs. legislative
Radical Republicans - Reforms → Punish South
Racism + weak Southern economy → Difficult change
Unfair laws + bad economy + no freedom/rights → Hurt freedmen