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Reconstruction 1865-1877. Black Southerners Approx. 4 million freedmen roaming the South Free yet homeless, jobless and hungry Some continued to work.

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Presentation on theme: "Reconstruction 1865-1877. Black Southerners Approx. 4 million freedmen roaming the South Free yet homeless, jobless and hungry Some continued to work."— Presentation transcript:

1 Reconstruction 1865-1877

2 Black Southerners Approx. 4 million freedmen roaming the South Free yet homeless, jobless and hungry Some continued to work for their former masters Others moved to the cities of the South or looked for opportunities in the West

3 Plantation Owners Lost over $3 billion worth of slave labor Many had their lands seized by the Union Many would lose their voting rights during Reconstruction while former slaves gained voting rights

4 Poor White Southerners Forced to compete with freed slaves Many migrated to Mississippi and Texas Many forced to work as sharecroppers and tenant farmers

5 PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION Lincoln’s Plan Johnson’s Plan

6 PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION LINCOLN’s PLANJOHNSON’s PLAN

7 Lincoln’s Reconstruction Plan

8 Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan Johnson was a Southerner / TN Democrat Offered Generous Pardons States must void secession, abolish slavery and repudiate the Confederate debt

9 What Freedom Meant to African Americans

10 The Freedman’s Bureau Established to help blacks southerners adjust to freedom 1 st major federal relief agency US History Lacked strong, ‘real’ support from the govt Gave out clothing, medical supplies, and meals to poor blacks and whites throughout the South

11 The Southern Response to Reconstruction “I’m A Good Ol’ Rebel” – The Shiners

12 The Southern Response to Reconstruction BLACK CODES _________________________________________ Common Codes included: Forced many blacks to become sharecroppers Forced many into slavery by another name Many in the North outraged

13 Birth of the Klan Founded in TN; 1866 Terrorist wing of Democratic party Goals: Consisted of whites from all classes Methods: Enemies:

14 The Big Idea Presidential Reconstruction Lincoln & Johnson Southern Resistance Black Codes & KKK Congressional Reconstruction “Radical Republicans”

15 Congressional “Radical” Reconstruction Civil Rights Act of 1866 The 14 th Amendment Reconstruction Act of 1867 The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson Grant is Elected President (1868) The 15 th Amendment Black Voting Rights / Elected Officials

16 The 14 th Amendment “All persons born or naturalized in the United States …are citizens of the United States and of the State in which they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law; nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws…”

17 The 14 th Amendment One of our most important Amendments Republicans wanted to place principles of Civil Rights Bill into a constitutional amendment Key Elements A response to Black Codes & Klan in the South

18 Voting Rights for Black Males Reconstruction Act of 1867  ¾ of a million blacks register to vote 2 States (LA & SC) chose a majority of blacks representatives More than 600 blacks elected to public office during Reconstruction

19 The Republican South Carptetbaggers Scalawags

20 The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson The Tenure of Office Act Johnson Fires Sec. of War Stanton Congress Brings Impeachment Charges against President Johnson By a single vote he is found not guilty in the US Senate Trial Legacy

21 The End of Reconstruction By the 1870s, voters had grown tired of Republicans & Reconstruction Support for racial equality in the US had diminished North focused on Business / Economics The US Supreme Court Limited the Scope of the Reconstruction Amendments (14 th and 15 th ) The Controversy surrounding the Election of 1876 The Compromise of 1877

22 Consequences ____________________________________________ ________________ The Solid South is Established ____________________________________________ ________________

23 Voting Restrictions in the South 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

24 Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Highlights the failure / limits of Reconstruction Leads to 70+ years of legally sanctioned racial segregation in the US (Jim Crow) Ruling applied to all aspects of public life (Education, Transportation, Housing, etc.) Overturned by __________________________

25 Contrasting Views of Reconstruction: President and Congress

26 Lynchings in the South Mob Murders A form of intimidation Averages 200+ per year in the South following Reconstruction Role of Ida B. Wells

27 American Experience | Reconstruction: The Second Civil War Faced with the growing threat of African American political, economic and social power, white Southerners put aside their differences to unite. With rough politics and terror they seek to restore their supremacy. Southern Democratic members of Congress voted as a block on almost all issues, allowing them to maintain de jure segregation and discrimination for over 75 years The Solid South

28 Successes & Failures of Reconstruction Union is Restored Economy of South grows / new wealth created in the North 14 th & 15 th Amendments Freedman’s Bureaus Improved Public Education in the South Legacy of Southern bitterness towards federal government & Republican party South is slow to Industrialize Black Codes / KKK Persist in the South Black & White Southerners caught in a cycle of poverty / debt Racism continues in both the North and the South

29 The Civil War & Reconstruction The North Won the War, But the South Won the Peace.

30 THE END!!


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