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5-1 Demonstrate an understanding of Reconstruction and its impact on the United States What are the political, economic, and social effects of Reconstruction.

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Presentation on theme: "5-1 Demonstrate an understanding of Reconstruction and its impact on the United States What are the political, economic, and social effects of Reconstruction."— Presentation transcript:

1 5-1 Demonstrate an understanding of Reconstruction and its impact on the United States 5-1.4 What are the political, economic, and social effects of Reconstruction on different populations in the South and other regions of the United States?

2 Effects of Reconstruction on Southern Elite The end of slavery, not Reconstruction policy, changed society in the South. Southern elite wanted to quickly reestablish the commercial viability of cotton production and thus retain their social position and regain political domination.

3 Effects of Reconstruction on Southern Elite Southern planters were forced to find another way to work their land. Southerners entered into sharecropping relationships with freedmen.

4 Effects of Reconstruction on Southern Elite Since state taxes were raised in order to provide for schools and other public services, some land owners, who were unable to pay the taxes, lost their land. The impact of these taxes was exaggerated by those Southerners who opposed the Reconstruction governments. Most landowners continued to own their land and be the social elite of the South.

5 Effects of Reconstruction on Southern Elite

6 Effects of Reconstruction on African Americans African Americans defined freedom differently than did most Northerners and Southerners. To them freedom meant literally they could leave the plantation and do whatever they wanted to do. Most sought every opportunity to reestablish family connections and provide the basic necessities of life for these families.

7 Effects of Reconstruction on African Americans Most Northerners and Southerners were interested in reestablishing a labor system that ensured high productivity at little cost to the investor. Consequently, freedmen were often denied the opportunity to own land. Freedmen were willing to enter the sharecropping agreements.

8 Watch the 3 rd 20 minutes of part 2 American Experience: "Reconstruction"

9 Effects of Reconstruction on African Americans They moved away from the Big House to the plot of land they would work. They refused to work in work gangs or have their wives and children work the fields from sun up to sun down as they had been forces to do under slavery. They gained some measure of social independence although they remained economically dependent on the land owners for land and credit.

10 Effects of Reconstruction on African Americans Many sought the opportunity to attend school and to worship as they pleased. They voted and elected African Americans and white Republicans who supported their interest to political offices. The African American’s new social independence created a secret intimidation that would take place for years to come by the Southern white.

11 Effects of Reconstruction on African Americans

12 Effects of Reconstruction on Poor Whites For poor whites, the Reconstruction period allowed some to have a political voice for the first time. Because they cooperated with the Republican government in the South, they were called ‘scalawags’ by the Southern elite and remained in a position of social inferiority. They were economically dependent on the land owner for land and credit.

13 Effects of Reconstruction on Poor Whites The poor farmers needed cash advances on the crop in order to feed their families while they waited for the harvest. Often harvest did not cover the debt or the farmer needed to borrow again the next year in order to sustain his families well being. This kept the sharecropper in a condition of constant debt and poverty and restricted his ability to improve his economic situation by either moving or changing crops.

14 Effects of Reconstruction on Poor Whites

15 Watch the 4 th 20 minutes of part 2 American Experience: "Reconstruction"

16 Moving to the South Some Northerners moved to the South during Reconstruction. Southerners accused these Northerners of taking advantage of the South, devastated by war, and called them “carpetbaggers.” The name suggested that the “carpetbaggers” were opportunists who had packed all their belongings in a carpet bag and came south to line their pockets with money.

17 Moving to the South However, the historical record shows that most of the Northern migrants came as missionaries and entrepreneurs to help educate the freedmen and rebuild the economy in the South.

18 Moving to the South

19 From Farms to Factories The movement from the farm to factory did no occur during Reconstruction, but rather during the last 2 decades of the 19 th century, after Reconstruction ended!! Entrepreneurs began to build textile factories in the Upcountry and later in the Midlands and Lowcountry.

20 From Farms to Factories As prices for cotton fell due to worldwide overproduction and decreased demand, the profitability of farming decreased significantly. Cotton depleted the soil and the boll weevil devastated cotton crops and forced farmers from the land

21 From Farms to Factories Textile factories attracted white workers from the farms. Most jobs at the mills were denied to African American workers.

22 From Farms to Factories

23 Watch the last 47 minutes of part 2 American Experience: "Reconstruction"


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