Chapter 12-Reconstruction
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Transcript Chapter 12-Reconstruction
Chapter 12:
Reconstruction
American History
Plans begin to unfold
The president and Congress grappled with the difficult tasks of
Reconstruction, or rebuilding the country after the Civil War
plans began right after the Civil War began
In 1863, Lincoln issued the Proclamation of Amnesty and
Reconstruction
offered general amnesty, or pardon for all Southerners who took
loyalty to the U.S. and accepted Union proclamation on slavery
The Radical Republicans, in opposition to Lincoln’s policies,
had three goals:
prevent leaders of Confederacy from returning to power
wanted Republican Party to be an institution in the South
Help African Americans gain the right to vote
Wade-Davis Bill
Moderate Republicans caught in the mix between the radicals
and Lincoln came up with a plan that supported both sides
Wade-Davis Bill
Required majority of white male Southerners to swear allegiance to the
Union
Confederate state would then hold a constitutional convention to
establish a new state government
Each convention would then abolish slavery, reject all debts, and
deprive all Confederate officials and military leaders of the right to
vote or hold office
Lincoln blocked the bill with a pocket veto, or waiting until
the session of Congress expired without signing the bill
felt bill was counterproductive
Freedman’s Bureau
Lincoln realized that the South was in chaos from the
thousands of homeless, unemployed, and hungry
Lincoln also realized that thousands of freedmen, or freed
slaves, were coming into the North
During the war, General Sherman used all abandoned
plantations to help freed African Americans
Refugee crisis led to the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and
Abandoned Lands, or the Freedman’s Bureau
Bureaus helped feed and clothe refugees of the war, find
employment for African Americans on plantations, negotiate
pay wages with Southern employers, and educated former
slaves in the North
Johnson’s Plans for
Reconstruction
Johnson took over as President when
Lincoln was assassinated
was hot tempered, but believed in
moderate principles
In 1865, Johnson implemented his own
restoration plan
Offered pardon to all Confederates
excluded former military officials and
Confederates with property valuing
more than $20,000
Those who were excluded from the
pardon had to apply directly to
Johnson for a pardon, for he believed
these people caused the war
Each state had to revoke its secession
and ratify the Thirteenth Amendment
Black Codes
New Southern legislatives passed
a series of laws known as black
codes
severely limited African rights in
the South
Africans were required to enter
into an annual working contract
African children had to join
apprenticeships and could be
subjected to beating during these
apprenticeships
Set specific work hours and
required Africans to get licenses
for non-agricultural jobs
Radicals take control
Many moderates joined the radicals and developed the Joint
Committee on Reconstruction, developing their own plan for
rebuilding the Union
passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866, granting all Americans, except
Native Americans, citizenship, and gave Africans the right to own
land
passed the Fourteenth Amendment, granting citizenship to all
people born and naturalized in the United States and that no
person should be deprived of “life, liberty, and property”, or
“equal protection of the laws”
passed the Military Reconstruction Act, dividing the South into five
military districts and had to hold another constitutional convention
to ratify a constitution deemed acceptable by Congress
Johnson impeached
By preventing Johnsons from bypassing Grant or firing
Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, both supporters of Republican
ideals, Congress passed these two acts:
Command of Army Act: all orders of the president had to go
through headquarters of the general of the army
Tenure of Office Act: Senate had to approve any removal of office
who appointment required Senate consent
Johnson fired Stanton anyway, and was impeached, or charged
with high crimes and misdemeanors for not abiding by the
Tenure of Office Act
was put on trial, but was acquitted and kept his place in office,
but had little power due to the impeachment
Election of 1868
Johnson finished his term and did
not seek re-election
Republicans nominated Ulysses S.
Grant for President
won elected, and gained major
support from Africans in the South
With the President on their side,
Congress passed the Fifteenth
Amendment
Declared the right to vote shall not be
denied by any “race, color, or
previous conditions of servitude”
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
Many Northerners moved to the South
and were elected into government
positions
Carpetbaggers
were seen as intruders trying to exploit
the South
some wanted to help, while others did
want to take advantage of the war-torn
South
Southerners also hated scalawags, or
white Southerners working with
Republicans and supported
Reconstruction
some were farmers, some were
Democrats, and most were businessmen
Republican Reforms
African Americans begin to take government positions
held different types of positions in all facets of government
angered Southerners, claiming “Black Republicanism” was taking over
the South
Republicans made reforms in the South
repelled all black code laws
established state hospitals and institutes for orphans, the mentally ill,
and the hearing and visually disabled
established a system of public schools
rebuilt roads, railways, and bridges
Reforms cost money, however
officials implemented heavy taxes
corrupt officials committed grafts, or illegally gaining money through
politics
African American communities
Once freed, African Americans desired to
get an education
incorporated African Americans in public
schools
built schools for African American
children
institutions offered advanced academics
for African Americans
African Americans also established their
own churches
housed social gatherings, events, and
schools
African Americans began several
organizations established to help
communities
Resistance from the South
Organizations began to erupt to
counteract the Black Republicans
Ku Klux Klan
started by former Confederate soldiers
Goal was to drive out the Union and
carpetbaggers and regain the South for
the Democratic Party
terrorized African American and
Republican communities
Republicans and African Americans
formed groups to protect themselves
from these organizations
confrontations all turned out violent
Enforcement Acts
To combat the violence in the
South, Grant and Congress
passed three Enforcement Acts
One made it a federal crime to
interfere with a person’s right to
vote
Two made federal marshals in
charge of federal elections
Three was the Klu Klux Klan Act,
outlawed the activities of the
Klan
Republican Party splits
Republican-controlled Congress continued to enforce
Reconstruction and expanded on programs it introduced during
the Civil War
kept tariffs high, tightened banking regulations, repaid debts with
gold, and increased federal spending on railways, port facilities,
and the postal service
Kept in place taxes on alcohol and tobacco: sin taxes
Democrats and Liberal Republicans disagreed with these
motions, stating they were used only to make the wealthy
more rich
nominated Horace Greeley for president, promising to remove
Union troops from the South and pardon nearly all Confederates
still lost to Grant
Scandals and Panics rock the
White House
Grant’s second term was plagued
with scandals and a financial panic
One scandal involved Secretary of
War William Belknap, who accepted
bribes from merchants operating in
army posts in the West
Another, called the “Whiskey Ring”
scandal, a group of government
officials and distillers cheated the
government by filing false tax reports
Panic of 1873: when large banking
firm of Jay Cooke & Company
declared bankruptcy, smaller banks
closed and the stock market
plummeted
Democrats take control, but
illegally
In the mid-term elections in 1873,
Democrats took much of the seats in
Congress, giving them power
committed election frauds and
appealed to Southern farmers, stating
that the South had a struggle
between African Americans and
whites
From Grant’s damaged reputation,
the Republicans nominated
Rutherford B. Hayes, while
Democrats nominated Samuel Tilton
for president
Compromise of 1877
From the election, Tilton won the
majority of votes, but 20 electoral votes
could not be accounted for
came from three states that Republicans
controlled: Louisiana, South Carolina,
and Florida
Had been so much election fraud on both
sides, no one could tell who the votes
went to
To help solve this issue, Congress
appointed a 15 man panel
8 were Republican, who voted for Hayes
to have the votes
Southern Democrats sided with the
Republicans, stating they helped Hayes
win and the Democrats accepted this
vote
Compromise of 1877
The New South emerges
Southern leaders called for the creation of the “New South”,
since the South could not be like it was before the war
With deals from Northerner financiers, portions of the South’s
economy became industrial
African Americans began to return to plantations to either work
for wages or become tenant farmers, or work for rent
some tenant farmers became sharecroppers, or people who paid
rent using the crops they grew
got equipment from furnishing merchants, or country stores, who
supplied credit and issued crop liens, or taking of crops to pay for
debts acquired by credit
the crop liens system led many to debt peonage, or inability to
move off of land due to the debts they had acquired
could not pay off debt or declare bankruptcy