Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

RECONSTRUCTION The End of the War and the Beginning of the After the War.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "RECONSTRUCTION The End of the War and the Beginning of the After the War."— Presentation transcript:

1 RECONSTRUCTION The End of the War and the Beginning of the After the War

2 What is reconstruction?  After the war there is a period called Reconstruction where the Northern government basically looks to “rebuild” the South  this is not a physical rebuilding it is more a societal rebuilding  What is the focus of Reconstruction?  rebuilding southern governments  the old governments in the South were seen as the ones responsible for the war  rebuilding Southern economy  rebuilding Southern society (how will they incorporate all of the new Freedmen)

3 Division in the Republican Party  Republicans controlled US govt  Democrats were still there but were marginalized due to their support for South before and during the Civil War  There are two factions of the Republican Party after the war  Radical Republicans  their focus is on punishing the South for the war  those Southerner’s responsible for the war (gov’t and military) will not be allowed to vote or hold office  Moderates/Lincolnites  their focus is on rebuilding country with as little difficulty as possible  do not want to punish the South  South will not be allowed to be as it was before the war just without slavery and hopefully the discrimination  The major question is who should run Reconstruction: President or Congress

4 Presidential Reconstruction  This was the plan that was crafted by Lincoln and then carried out by President Johnson  The 10% Plan to re-admit southern states for political purposes  10% of a southern states population in 1860 needed to pledge allegiance to the Union  state would need to abolish slavery within the state  Southern leaders (except for the top leaders) could regain citizenship and property if they took a loyalty oath

5 Wade Davis Bill  Radicals had a plan to counter 10% plan called the Wade Davis Bill to re-admit states  50% of a states population had to pledge allegiance to the Union  state needed to abolish slavery  no former Confederate official could vote or hold office  Southerners needed to pledge that they never supported the Confederacy in order to regain their right to vote/hold office  Lincoln pocket vetoes this so it never officially goes into effect

6 Johnson oversteps Power  Dec. 1865 President Johnson said he believed southern states were all re-admitted  This angered the Radicals and some moderates  Johnson also pardoned many Confederate leaders giving them full rights to vote and hold political office  Congressional leaders refused to allow Southerners elected to Congress to be seated (can’t serve if not seated)  The Radicals in Congress began to impose their own view on what should be done  they soon had votes to override a Johnson veto

7 Radical (Congressional) Reconstruction  Radicals in Congress worked to minimize Pres. Johnson’s power in Reconstruction  passed several laws to take his power away  they would override Johnson’s vetoes (he could not stop this)  1867 Congress divided south into 5 military districts  these would be governed by military governors who answered to Radicals in Congress  1867 Congress passed law giving black men right to vote in South  blacks began to serve in state government and in Congress

8 Impeachment  Radicals in Congress want Pres. Johnson out of way  they began passing laws to minimize his power  they pass the Tenure of Office Act to protect Radicals in his Cabinet  Johnson challenges Radicals firing Sec War Stanton  Feb. 24, 1868 House of Reps votes to impeach Johnson  in the trial part Senate does not vote to remove Johnson (misses this by 1 vote – needed 2/3 of Senators to vote to remove him)  While Johnson survives impeachment he is a lame duck with no power to do anything of meaning


Download ppt "RECONSTRUCTION The End of the War and the Beginning of the After the War."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google