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Reconstruction to Civil Rights

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Presentation on theme: "Reconstruction to Civil Rights"— Presentation transcript:

1 Reconstruction to Civil Rights
This slide introduces Chapter 4, “Settlement of the Thirteenth Colony.”

2 Learning Targets Freedmen’s Bureau  Sharecropping and Tenant Farming
I can analyze the impact of Reconstruction on Georgia and other southern states. Freedmen’s Bureau  Sharecropping and Tenant Farming  Reconstruction Plans 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments to the Constitution Henry McNeal Turner & Black Legislators Ku Klux Klan This is an essential question for this section of the chapter.

3 Freedmen’s Bureau The purpose of the Freedmen’s Bureau during Reconstruction was to provide education, food, shelter, training, and in getting jobs for newly freed slaves.

4 Economic Reconstruction
Without slaves, landowners needed laborers to work their large farms. Two systems emerged: tenant farming and sharecropping

5 Sharecropping Tenant Farming
Landowner provides a house, land, equipment, animals, fertilizer and seeds. Workers agreed to give the owner a share of the harvest. The landowner issued credit to the worker to buy medicine, food, clothing and other supplies until workers sold crops. The landowner gets a share of the crop and crops to pay any debt owed. Sharecroppers rarely had any cash and little hope to ever buy their own land and equipment. Landowner provides house and land. Tenant farmer usually owned some agricultural equipment and farm animals. At the end of the year, tenant farmers either paid the landowner a set amount of cash or an agreed upon share of the crop. Owned more than sharecroppers. Usually made a small profit.

6 Reconstruction Amendments
The 13th Amendment to the United States’ Constitution officially abolished slavery.

7 Reconstruction Amendments
The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution also gave Freedmen the right to citizenship.

8 Reconstruction Amendments
The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution also gave Freedmen the right to citizenship.

9 As a result, Congress passed “The Georgia Act” and sent troops back to Georgia.
The act required Georgia to pass the 15th Amendment giving all males the right to vote.

10 15th Amendment Ratified in 1870 & gave all male citizens the right to vote. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Women’s rights groups were furious that they were not granted the vote!

11 African Americans in Politics
The election of 1867 was the first time African Americans had voted. Several African Americans were elected to Georgia’s General Assembly.

12 AS A RESULT OF THE RECONSTRUCTION ACTS,
MANY AFRICAN AMERICANS SERVED AT THE LOCAL, STATE, AND NATIONAL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT

13 Henry McNeal Turner was one of the first black men elected to Georgia’s House of Representatives.

14 Colored Rule in the South?

15 The African Americans elected to the General Assembly were expelled in 1868.
It was argued by whites that civil rights laws gave blacks the right to vote but not to be elected.

16 IN RESPONSE TO NEW AFRICAN AMERICAN RIGHTS, SEVERAL HATE GROUPS SPRANG UP THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH.

17 Ku Klux Klan The Ku Klux Klan Was The Most Powerful One.
It Was Created In 1866 By A Group Of Former Confederate Soldiers Who Planned To Utilize Violence To Terrorize Blacks And White Sympathizers To Prevent Them From Exercising Their New Rights. Secret organization – originally started as a social club for men returning from the war. Members hid behind robes and masks. The group terrorized blacks to keep them from voting.

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20 Banks Banks began to reopen and were able to loan money to merchants and businessmen.

21 By late 1860- Dry goods stores, shops, and hotels opened again.
Businesses Reopened By late Dry goods stores, shops, and hotels opened again.

22 Railroads Railroads-necessary to the success of Georgia’s economy
expanded across the state.

23 Savannah and Brunswick became important shipping ports.

24 Atlanta Atlanta was rebuilt and began to grow into an important business center.

25 Capital Moves to Atlanta
In 1868, Georgia’s capital moved to Atlanta. In 1877, Georgia voters chose Atlanta to be the permanent state capital. The vote was 99,147 to 55,201.

26 The End of Reconstruction
The African Americans who had been expelled from the General Assembly in 1868 were readmitted by the Georgia Supreme Court in 1870. The Assembly approved the 14th and 15th Amendments. Georgia was readmitted to the Union, again, ending Reconstruction.

27 MAP OF THE DATES THE STATES REENTERED THE UNION


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