Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 3, 2011 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reconstruction. State of the South Questions of Reconstruction ► How to rebuild the South after the Civil War? ► How to readmit the Confederate.
Advertisements

RECONSTRUCTION. After the Civil War, the South was defeated militarily, devastated economically, and many were just trying to rebuild their lives. Congress.
The Agony of Reconstruction People Congressional Reconstruction Presidential Reconstruction Bills Acts, and Amendments Terms
Power Presentations CHAPTER 18. Image Democratic Ideals The Civil War has just ended, and the Southern states are back in the Union. But the Southern.
Reconstruction and it’s Aftermath Radicals in Control p
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 23, 2014 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
The American Promise: A History of the United States Fourth Edition
The Battle Over Reconstruction
Post Civil War Reconstruction Notes
 When: approximately from the end of Reconstruction (1877) until the mid- 1950s  What: an era in American history when segregation laws, rules, and.
RIVAL PLANS FOR RECONSTRUCTION
Thursday February 6, 2014 Turn in 12.1 assignment
UNIT 8 STUDY GUIDE Day 1 STANDARD INDICATORS
Plans for Reconstruction Chapter 12 Section 1
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 24, 2014 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
Chapter 15 Reconstruction
Chapter 18 Section 2 Radical Reconstruction. Black Codes Laws set up by Southern States Laws set up by Southern States Limits the rights of freedmen Limits.
Review for Test on Reconstruction. In simple terms, what did the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments provide? 13-abolish slavery or freedom.
Civil War Reconstruction How do we rebuild the South, and our Nation, after the American Civil War?
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 Rival Plans for Reconstruction Explain why a plan was needed for Reconstruction of the South. Compare.
Exploring American History Unit V- The Nation Breaks Apart Chapter 17 Section 2- The Fight over Reconstruction Station Lecture with in class note sheet.
22. Ordeal of Reconstruction Pt 2: Pages Congressional Reconstruction Rad Rep not happy that ex-Confederates are representing S again in Congress.
Unit 1: Reconstruction. A. Reconstruction Defined 1. Reconstruction: the period of rebuilding the South and readmitting Southern states into the Union.
What term refers to the plan for rebuilding the South after the Civil War?
Reconstruction Source:
Standard – SSUSH 10 The student will identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstruction. a)Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction.
Reconstruction What was the period when the federal government tried to rebuild the South and restore the Union after the Civil War?  Reconstruction.
Reconstruction What was the period when the federal government tried to rebuild the South and restore the Union after the Civil War? Reconstruction.
Exploring American History Unit V- The Nation Breaks Apart Chapter 17 Section 2- The Fight over Reconstruction.
Reconstruction Rebuilding the South Main Idea: Conflicting plans for dealing with the post-Civil War South had long-lasting effects on government and the.
POST CIVIL WAR AMERICA RECONSTRUCTION PROBLEMS TO FACE 1-HOW TO REBUILD THE SOUTH? 2-HOW WOULD THE FREED SLAVES SURVIVE? 3-HOW WOULD SOUTHERN.
SOL: VUS.7a,b,c. Economic Impacts  The South lay decimated after the war.  Many farms, RR’s, cities are ruined.  The North saw an economic boom. 
RECONSTRUCTION BEGINS Mr. Johnson APUSH Hopewell High School.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute December 14, 2015 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. The Reconstruction.
Reconstruction Presidential Versus Congressional Reconstruction.
The Battle Over Reconstruction Chapter 16 Section 2.
January 13, 2013 EQ- How was reconstruction carried out in the South? Standard- USH10 Table of Contents: 86. Reconstruction Powerpoint notes 87. Presidential.
Reconstruction: ( ), the federal government struggled with – How to return the eleven southern states into the Union; – Rebuild the South’s Economy;
Reconstruction Themes: Johnson’s political blunders and Southern white resistance led to the imposition of congressional military Reconstruction on the.
Congressional Reconstruction Aim: Was the Radical Republican plan for Reconstruction too extreme?
The Politics of Reconstruction Section 12-1 pp
Black Reconstruction Chapter 14, Section 3 Main Ideas: –Analyze the myth and reality of Black Reconstruction. –Explain why the impeachment proceedings.
The Politics of Reconstruction Chapter 12 Section 1.
VOCABULARY CARDS Reconstruction. Definition: The time period after the Civil War when the United States began to rebuild the South.  The Southern states.
RIVAL PLANS FOR RECONSTRUCTION Chapter 12 Section 1.
Reconstruction Policy & SC 8.5-1—Analyze the development of Reconstruction policy and its impact in South Carolina, including the presidential and the.
RECONSTRUCTION Analyze the impact of reconstruction in the following areas: geographic, political, social, and economic.
 What federal agency built schools and provided education for blacks? The freedman’s bureau  What was the Ku Klux Klan’s main goal with its use of terror?
Reconstruction.
CHAPTER 15 SECTION 1.
Reconstruction ( ).
Chapter 12, Section 2 The Battle Over Reconstruction p
Reconstruction and Its Effects Chapter 12 – Section 1
ESWBAT: Understand and use vocabulary for the Reconstruction Era by having students sharing the words they defined. Do Now: Video Clip on Reconstruction.
Chapter 4 RECONSTRUCTION AND THE NEW SOUTH
VII. The Baleful Black Codes
Chapter 4 RECONSTRUCTION AND THE NEW SOUTH
Day 80: The Ordeal of Reconstruction
Congress, Under Radical Republican Leadership, Opposes Johnson
Rival Plans for Reconstruction
Reconstruction and Its Effects
Day 74: The Ordeal of Reconstruction
Reconstruction ( ).
Day 77: The Ordeal of Reconstruction
What were the Different Reconstruction Plans?
The Politics of Reconstruction
Reconstruction: Creating a “New South”
Chapter 15 Reconstruction
Presentation transcript:

Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 3, 2011 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green

Objectives: Define the major problems facing the nation and the South after the Civil War. Describe the responses of both whites and African Americans to the end of slavery. Analyze the differences between the presidential and congressional approaches to Reconstruction. Explain how the blunders of President Johnson and the resistance of the white South opened the door to the Republicans’ radical Reconstruction AP Focus The Union victory is significant in transforming and diversifying the South’s production. It also represents the defeat of the planter-slaveholder and the continued rise of the industrial capitalist. In the aftermath of the war, especially in those southern states that reenter the Union under Johnson’s lenient plan, Black Codes again segregate and subordinate the South’s blacks. Organizations, such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Knights of the White Camellia, use violence and intimidation to deny blacks access to institutions, such as voting, that would improve their lives. Blacks are reduced to a form of slavery without chains, in that they are economically dependent and subservient to the owner of the land on which they are sharecroppers.

CHAPTER THEMES  Johnson’s political blunders and Southern white recalcitrance led to the imposition of congressional military Reconstruction on the South. Reconstruction did address difficult issues of reform and racial justice in the South and achieved some successes, but was ultimately abandoned, leaving a deep legacy of racial and sectional bitterness. During Reconstruction, the Constitution was strengthened with the Fourteenth (citizenship and equal protection of the laws) and Fifteenth (black voting rights) Amendments, but it was also tested with the conflicts between the president and Congress that culminated in an impeachment process.

Decades Chart 1860’s-Due Today Focus Questions Chapter 22-Due January 4

Black codes-regulated the affairs of the emancipated blacks Created the share-cropping class of emancipated blacks and landless whites African-Americans not allowed to 1. Serve on a jury 2. Rent/own land 3. Punished for idleness The North looked down on the South for this reaction

Many ex-Confederates won state elections as senators and representatives The North enjoyed free reign during the war Morrill Tariff, Pacific Railroad Act, Homestead Act With newly freed slaves, the South population was about to explode and increase their power Johnson claims southern states must conditions on Dec 6, 1865

Johnson vetoed and Congress overrode the Civil Rights Bill of th Amendment 1. Civil Rights/Citizenship 2. reduced representation if a state denied African-Americans the right to vote 3. disqualified former Confederates as federal office-holders 4. guaranteed federal debt/repudiated Confederate debt

Johnson’s lack of vote-getting in the mid- terms of 1866 resulted in a 2/3 majority for the Republicans in both houses of Congress

Charles Sumner-led radicals in the Senate Thaddeus Stevens-led radicals in the House Radical Republicans keep Southern states out as long as possible use federal power Moderate Republicans restrain states from denying citizens’ rights limited federal authority had the upper hand

Congressional Reconstruction Act-March 2, military districts in the South disfranchised former Confederates Readmission ratify 14 th amendment state guarantee of full suffrage to blacks 15 th amendment Women Rights were not addressed at this time Elizabeth Cady Stanton/Susan B. Anthony not supportive of the 14 th /15 th amendment Scalawags-former Unionists/Whigs that were corrupt Carpetbaggers-northerners seeking power in the South politically or economically or both

 Continue Reading Chapter 22  Prepare for 10 question reading check on Chapter 22 on Wednesday  Study guide will be distributed on Friday for Mid-Term