Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reconstruction Era
Advertisements

The Sharecropping System
Reconstruction Freedmen’s Bureau Tenant Farming Sharecropping.
Review 1. What was an immediate cause of the secession? Lincoln’s election 2. How was Lincoln going to deal with reconstruction? Treat the Confederate.
SS8H6c Georgia’s History: Reconstruction © 2014 Brain Wrinkles.
The Freedmen's Bureau. ● The Freedmen's Bureau helped thousands of poor whites and blacks. ● It was initiated by President Abraham Lincoln. ● The Bureau.
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South Reconstruction – The period following the Civil War in which Congress passed laws designed to rebuild the country.
MRS. BRYANT’S 5 TH GRADE GEORGIA STANDARDS WJIS 1 Reconstruction.
Beginning of Reconstruction. Reconstruction Period after the Civil War 1867 – 1877 The south is brought back as part of the United States.
Reconstruction to Civil Rights. Freedmen’s Bureau Sharecropping and Tenant Farming Reconstruction Plans 13 th, 14 th, 15 th Amendments to the Constitution.
The South was in ruins & the people of the nation agreed that the South’s economy & society needed rebuilding. This period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction.
Effects on American Life
The 13th Amendment officially ended slavery in the United States forever.
Reconstruction. How to put the Union back together?
CHAPTER 5 NOTES RECONSTRUCTION.
Social Studies Week One Fifth Grade. What was the standard for rejoining the Union under Lincoln’s plan for Reconstruction?
Reconstruction Rebuilding the South.
Sharecropping The Life of Many African Americans and Poor People After the Civil War.
Reconstruction Standard 4.6. What is Reconstruction? Reconstruction –  a time period after the Civil War  the federal government protected the rights.
Notes 17.2 Radicals in Control. African Americans’ Rights Black Codes-laws in the South that aimed to control freedmen and allow exploitation of AA by.
Reconstruction.
Reconstruction Jeopardy People LawsGroups
Effects on American Life
Notes #10 Reconstruction and Life after the Civil War.
Reconstruction and the New South Rebuilding the Nation The Battle Over Reconstruction The End of Reconstruction It’s the LawOdds and Ends $200 $400 $600.
Reconstruction of the South. The Civil War  War between the North (Union) and South (Confederacy)  The South wanted:  To preserve their way.
Reconstruction Jaguar’dy Vocabulary People Laws Reconstruction Grab Bag
Chapter 4 Lesson 4.  When the Civil War finally ended, it was clear that peace had not come easily. More than 600,000 soldiers had died. Many others.
Alex O. Mr. Bayne 1 st period.  President Lincoln believed that the South shouldn’t be punished for the Civil War.  5 days after Lee’s surrender, Lincoln.
Reconstruction. Time period after the Civil War when the south was rebuilt.
Reconstruction January 20, After the war… When the Civil War ended in _____, many soldiers on both sides went home to drastic changes In the _____,
By Miss O.. January 1, 1863 Executive order by President Lincoln Freed all the slaves in the southern states that had “rebelled”
Civil War Reconstruction After the War PeopleMiscellaneousVirginia
AFRICAN AMERICANS TRY TO BETTER THEMSELVES THE POST CIVIL WAR WORLD.
Life after Slavery Post Civil War.
Mrs. Bryant’s 5th Grade Georgia Standards WjEs 1
EQ: In what ways were slavery and sharecropping similar and different?
Chapter 13 Reconstruction. Vocabulary 1. Freedman th amendment 3. Freedman’s Bureau 4. Sharecropping 5. Black codes th amendment.
Reconstruction of the South. The Civil War War between the North (Union) and South (Confederacy) The South wanted:  To preserve their way of.
Reconstruction: ( ), the federal government struggled with – How to return the eleven southern states into the Union; – Rebuild the South’s Economy;
Reconstruction Era The End of Slavery Lesson 4 ► Main Idea – The country faced many difficult challenges after the Civil War ended, including.
Analyze the impact of Reconstruction on Georgia and other southern states emphasizing Freedmen’s Bureau, sharecropping and tenant farming,
Sharecropping Francisco De La Cruz Alberto Flores.
Unit 7: The Reconstruction Period SS8H6: The student will analyze the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on Georgia. c. Analyze the impact of Reconstruction.
Main Idea Why It Matters Now As the South rebuilt, millions of newly freed African Americans worked to improve their lives. Many important African-American.
RECONSTRUCTIONRECONSTRUCTION 1. Title and Name. 6. EFFECTS OF THE WAR The Civil War had major effects on the North and the South. Thousands of young men.
RECONSTRUCTION. THE BASICS – WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT RECONSTRUCTION What economic, social, and political reconstruction were The role of the Freedmen’s.
The War When the Civil War finally ended, it was clear that peace had not come easily. More than 600,000 soldiers had died. Many others had returned home.
Reconstruction Era in GA in GA Officially ends in the South in 1877.
Reconstruction the period of rebuilding the South and restoring the Southern states to the Union after the Civil War.
After the Civil War: Reconstruction Plans
Reconstruction to Civil Rights
Reconstruction and Daily Life
Reconstruction Rebuilding the South.
Reconstruction In Texas,
The South After the Civil War
Mrs. Bryant’s 5th Grade Georgia Standards WjEs 1
Mrs. Bryant’s 5th Grade Georgia Standards WjEs 1
Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves?
Reconstruction In Texas,
Reconstruction in Georgia
Reconstruction & Georgia
Reconstruction
Reconstruction to Civil Rights
Reconstruction to Civil Rights
Reconstruction - video
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South
Reconstruction USH-3.3.
Reconstruction By Miss O..
Sharecropping The Life of Many African Americans and Poor People After the Civil War.
Presentation transcript:

Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184,

A Free People With the Union victory, 4 million enslaved people were freed. Free Africans quickly began to form new communities. They built churches and schools and opened businesses. Many former slaves began to search for family members who had been sold during slavery.

A Free People Newspapers were filled with ads asking for help in locating loved ones. Former slaves worked hard to build new lives. Yet life remained difficult. Often it was hard to find food, clothing, and shelter. Many began to look to the United States government for help.

New Amendments The 13 th Amendment abolished slavery in the United States and was ratified on December 18, 1865.

New Amendments The 14 th Amendment made blacks citizens of the United States and guaranteed them the same legal rights as whites. It was ratified on July 28, 1868.

New Amendments The 15 th Amendment says that governments in the United States may not prevent a citizen from voting because of his race, color, or previous condition of servitude (slavery). It was ratified on February 3, 1870.

Former Confederate States Readmission to the Union

The Freedmen’s Bureau The Freedmen’s Bureau was set up by Congress in 1865 to help former slaves. The Bureau gave food and other supplies to freed slaves. The most important job of the Freedmen’s Bureau was education. Newly freed slaves were eager to learn to read and write. Over 4,000 schools were built to educate former slaves.

The Freedmen’s Bureau The Bureau also wanted to give free land to former slaves to farm. The land was to be taken from plantations taken during the war, but the government decided to give plantations back to their owners.

Sharecropping In search for jobs, some former slaves went back to work on plantations. Many planters welcomed them. Fields needed to be plowed, and crops needed to be planted Now, however, plantation owners had to pay Africans for their work.

Sharecropping In the days after the war, there was not much money. Instead of paying in cash, many landowners paid them in shares. A landowner would provide a cabin and supplies. (tools, mules, seeds, etc.) At harvest time the landowner would take part of the crops, plus enough to cover the cost of the worker’s rent and supplies. What was left was the workers share. Even in good times, most workers received very little, if anything at all.