history

cara cao
file.pptx

THE AGONY OF RECONSTRUCTION

America: Past and Present

Chapter 16

The President Versus Congress

The North split on reconstructing the South

White House seeks speedy Reconstruction with minimum changes in the South

Congress seeks slower Reconstruction, demands protection for freedmen

Wartime Reconstruction

Lincoln announces lenient policy in 1863

Congress resents Lincoln’s effort to control

Congressmen seek to condition readmission to Union on black suffrage

Congress mistrusts white Southerners

Andrew Johnson at the Helm

Republicans initially support Southern Democrat Johnson as enemy of planter class

Johnson, Republicans split on Reconstruction

Johnson instructs Southern conventions to

declare secession illegal

repudiate Confederate debt

ratify the Thirteenth Amendment

Andrew Johnson at the Helm (2)

Southern conventions reluctantly carry out Johnson’s orders

Conventions pass “Black Codes”

Johnson approves conventions’ actions

Congress condemns conventions

Congress Takes the Initiative

Congress insists on black suffrage

Mixed motives

Republicans expect to get black vote

ideological commitment to equal rights

fear that South would fall under great planter control without black suffrage

Congress Takes the Initiative (2)

1866--Johnson vetoes two bills

extension of Freedmen’s Bureau

civil rights bill to overturn Black Codes

Republicans pass Fourteenth Amendment

Johnson’s National Union party runs against Republican congressmen in elections

Elections of 1866 strengthen Republicans

Congressional Reconstruction Plan Enacted

South under military rule until black suffrage fully secured

Split over duration of federal protection

Radicals recognize need for long period

most wish military occupation to be short

Assumption: black suffrage sufficient to empower freedmen to protect themselves

Reconstruction

The Impeachment Crisis

Johnson moves to obstruct Reconstruction

February, 1868--Congress impeaches

Senate refuses to convict Johnson

Radical Republicans seen as subversive of Constitution, lose public support

Reconstructing Southern Society

Three contending interests in South

Southern whites seek to keep newly-freed blacks inferior

Northern whites seek to make money or to "civilize" the region

blacks seek equality

Decline of federal interest in Reconstruction permits triumph of reaction and racism

Reorganizing Land and Labor

Ex-slaves wish to work their own land

Federal government sometimes grants land

Land reverts to white owners under Johnson

Slaveowners try to impose contract labor

Blacks insist on sharecropping

Sharecropping soon becomes peonage

Black Codes: A New Name for Slavery?

South increasingly segregated after War

Black Codes designed to return blacks to quasi-slavery

codes overturned by Congress

Violence and discrimination continued on a large scale

Republican Rule in the South

1867--Southern Republican party organized

businesspeople want government aid

white farmers want protection from creditors

blacks form majority of party, want social and political equality

Republican coalition unstable

Republicans break up when whites leave

Republican Rule in the South (2)

Republicans improve public education, welfare, and transportation

Republican state legislatures corrupt

whites control most Radical state governments

African Americans given blame for corruption

Claiming Public and Private Rights

Freed slaves viewed legalized marriage as an important step in claiming political rights

They also formed churches, fraternal and benevolent associations, political organizations, and schools

Education for children was a top priority

Retreat from Reconstruction

Enormous problems 1868-1876

Grant’s weak principles contribute to failure

Rise of the Money Question

Panic of 1873 raises “the money question”

debtors seek inflationary monetary policy by continuing circulation of "greenbacks"

creditors, intellectuals support hard money

1875--government commits to hard money

1876--Greenback party formed, makes gains in congressional races

Final Efforts of Reconstruction

1869--15th Amendment passed

also enfranchised Northern blacks

Women’s rights group were upset that they were not granted the vote

Northern support for black citizenship waned

A Reign of Terror Against Blacks

Secret societies sought to keep blacks out of the political process

They also brought insurrections against state governments

1870s--Congress tries to suppress Ku Klux Klan, other Southern terrorist groups

By 1876 Republicans control only South Carolina, Louisiana, and Florida

Northern support for military action wanes

Spoilsmen Versus Reformers

Rumors of corruption during Grant's first term discredit Republicans

1872--Grant wins reelection over Liberal Republican, Democrat Horace Greeley

Grant’s second term rocked by scandal

Reunion and the New South

North and South reconcile after 1877

Terms of reconciliation

African Americans stripped of political gains

big business interests favored over small farmer

The Compromise of 1877

Election of 1876 disputed

Special Congressional commission gives disputed vote to Rutherford B. Hayes

Southern Democrats accept on two conditions

guarantee of federal aid to the South

removal of all remaining federal troops

Hayes’ agreement ends Reconstruction

“Redeeming” a New South

Southern "Redeemers" favor commerce, manufacturing over agriculture

Gain power by doctrine of white supremacy

Neglect problems of small farmers

The Rise of Jim Crow

Redeemer Democrats systematically exclude black voters

Jim Crow laws legalize segregation and restrict black civil rights

By 1910 the process was complete

The North and the federal government did little or nothing to prevent it

The Rise of Jim Crow (2)

Lynching—187 blacks lynched yearly 1889-1899

U.S. Supreme Court decisions gut Reconstruction Amendments 1875-1896

“Reunion” accomplished as North tacitly acquiesces in Southern discrimination

Henry McNeal Turner and the “Unfinished Revolution”

Henry McNeal Turner’s career summarized the Southern black experience during and after Reconstruction

He supported the Union during the war

After Reconstruction Northerners tacitly approved oppression of Southern blacks