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Chapter Seventeen Reconstruction, 1863—1877. Chapter Focus Questions 1.What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter Seventeen Reconstruction, 1863—1877. Chapter Focus Questions 1.What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter Seventeen Reconstruction, 1863—1877

2 Chapter Focus Questions 1.What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy? 2.How difficult was the transition from slavery to freedom for African Americans? 3.What was the political and social legacy of Reconstruction in the southern states? 4.What were the post-Civil War transformations in the economic and political life of the North?

3 From Slavery to Freedom in a Black Belt Community? In Hale County, former slaves showed an increased sense of autonomy, expressing it through politics and through their new work patterns. One planter described how freed people refused to do “their former accustomed work.” Former slaveholders had to reorganize their plantations and allow slaves to work the land as sharecroppers, rather than hired hands. Freed people organized themselves and elected two of their number to the state legislature. These acts of autonomy led to a white backlash, including nighttime attacks by Ku Klux Klansmen intent on terrorizing freed blacks and maintaining white social and political supremacy.

4 Section 17.1: The Politics of Reconstruction

5 A. The Defeated South 1.The South had been thoroughly defeated and its economy lay in ruins. 2.The presence of Union troops further embittered white Southerners. 3.The bitterest pill was the changed status of African Americans whose freedom seemed an affront to white supremacy.

6 B. Abraham Lincoln’s Plan 1.Lincoln promoted a plan to bring states back into the Union as swiftly as possible protecting private property and opposing harsh punishments. a.Amnesty was promised to those swearing allegiance. b.State governments could be established if 10 percent of the voters took an oath of allegiance. 2.Lincoln used a pocket veto to kill a plan passed by Congressional radicals 3.Redistribution of land posed another problem. 4.Congress created the Freedman’s Bureau and passed the Thirteenth Amendment

7 Photography pioneer Timothy O’Sullivan took this portrait of a multigenerational African American family on the J.J. Smith plantation in Beaufort, South Carolina, 1862. Many white plantation owners in the area had fled, allowing slaves like these to begin an early transition to freedom before the end of the Civil War. SOURCE:Corbis/Bettmann.

8 C. Andrew Johnson and Presidential Reconstruction 1.Andrew Johnson, the new president, was a War Democrat from Tennessee. 2.He had used harsh language to describe southern “traitors” but blamed individuals rather than the entire South for secession. 3.While Congress was not in session he granted amnesty to most Confederates. - Initially, wealthy landholders and members of the political elite had been excluded, but Johnson pardoned most of them. 4.Johnson appointed provisional governors who organized new governments. 5.By December, Johnson claimed that “restoration” was virtually complete.

9 D. The Radical Republican Vision 1.Radical Republicans wanted to remake the South in the North’s image, advocating land redistribution to make former slaves independent landowners. 2.Stringent “Black Codes” outraged many Northerners. 3.In December 1865, Congress excluded the southern representatives. 4.Congress overrode Johnson’s vetoes of a Civil Rights bill and a bill to enlarge the scope of the Freedman’s Bureau. - Fearful that courts might declare the Civil Rights Act unconstitutional, Congress drafted the Fourteenth Amendment. 5.Republicans won the Congressional elections of 1866 that had been a showdown between Congress and Johnson over Reconstruction and the amendment.

10 E. Congressional Reconstruction and the Impeachment Crisis 1.The First Reconstruction Act of 1867 enfranchised blacks and divided the South into five military districts. 2.A crisis developed over whether Johnson could replace Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. - In violation of the Tenure of Office Act, Johnson fired Stanton. 3.The House impeached Johnson but the Senate vote fell one vote short of conviction. - This set the precedent that criminal actions by a president—not political disagreements—warranted removal from office.

11 MAP 17.1 Reconstruction of the South, 1866–77 Dates for the readmission of former Confederate states to the Union and the return of Democrats to power varied according to the specific political situations in those states.

12 F. The Election of 1868 1.By 1868, eight of the eleven ex-Confederate states were back in the Union. 2.Republicans nominated Ulysses Grant for president. 3.The Republicans attacked Democrats’ loyalties. 4.Democrats exploited racism to gather votes and used terror in the South to keep Republicans from voting. 5.Republicans won with less than 53 percent of the vote.

13 The Fifteenth Amendment, 1870. The Fifteenth Amendment, ratified in 1870, stipulated that the right to vote could not be denied “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” This illustration expressed the optimism and hopes of African Americans generated by this Consitutional landmark aimed at protecting black political rights. Note the various political figures (Abraham Lincoln, John Brown, Frederick Douglass) and movements (abolitionism, black education) invoked here, providing a sense of how the amendement culminated a long historical struggle. SOURCE:Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

14 G. Reconstruction and Ratification 1.The remaining unreconstructed states (Mississippi, Texas, and Virginia) had to ratify both the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to be admitted to the Union. a.National citizenship included former slaves (“all persons born or naturalized in the United States”). b.“The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” 2.The states ratified the amendments and rejoined the Union in 1870.

15 H. Woman Suffrage and Reconstruction 1.Women’s rights activists were outraged that the new laws enfranchised African Americans but not women. 2.The movement split over whether to support a linkage between the rights of women and African Americans. a.The more radical group fought against the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment and formed an all-female suffrage group. b.A more moderate group supported the amendment while working toward suffrage at a state level and enlisting the support of men.

16 Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906) and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902), the two most influential leaders of the woman suffrage movement, ca. 1892. Anthony and Stanton broke with their longtime abolitionist allies after the Civil War, when they opposed the Fifteenth Amendment. They argued that the doctrine of universal manhood suffrage it embodied would give consitutional authority to the claim that men were the social and political superiors of women. As founders of the militant National Woman Suffrage Association, Stanton and Anthony established an independent woman suffrage movement with a broader spectrum of goals for women’s rights, and drew millions of women into public life during the late nineteenth century. SOURCE:The Susan B.Anthony House,Rochester,NY.


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