help with hist due in 5 hours
attached
a year ago
16
TheAmericanYawpReader.docx
ChiefJosephDiscussion.docx
TheAmericanYawpReader.docx
The American Yawp Reader
https://www.americanyawp.com/reader/reconstruction/
Reconstruction Reader
Thomas Nast, “Reconstruction and How It Works,” Harper’s Weekly, 1866, via HarpWeek .
Introduction
After the Civil War, much of the South lay in ruins. How would these states be brought back into the Union? Would they be conquered territories or equal states? How would they rebuild their governments, economies, and social systems? What rights did freedom confer upon formerly enslaved people? The answers to many of Reconstruction’s questions hinged upon the concepts of citizenship and equality. The era witnessed perhaps the most open and widespread discussions of citizenship since the nation’s founding. It was a moment of revolutionary possibility and violent backlash. African Americans and Radical Republicans pushed the nation to finally realize the Declaration of Independence’s promises that “all men were created equal” and had “certain, unalienable rights.” Conservative white Democrats granted African Americans legal freedom but little more. When Black Americans and their radical allies succeeded in securing citizenship for freedpeople, a new fight commenced to determine the legal, political, and social implications of American citizenship. Resistance continued, and Reconstruction eventually collapsed. In the South, limits on human freedom endured and would stand for nearly a century more. These sources gesture toward both the successes and failures of Reconstruction.
Documents
1. Freedmen discuss post-emancipation life with General Sherman, 1865
2. Jourdon Anderson writes his former enslaver, 1865
3. Charlotte Forten teaches freed children in South Carolina, 1864
4. Mississippi Black Code, 1865
5. General Reynolds describes lawlessness in Texas, 1868
6. A case of sexual violence during Reconstruction, 1866
7. Frederick Douglass on remembering the Civil War, 1877
Media
Johnson and Reconstruction cartoon, 1866
Thomas Nast, “Reconstruction and How It Works,” Harper’s Weekly, 1866, via HarpWeek .
Fifteenth Amendment print, 1870
Thomas Kelley, “The Fifteenth Amendment,” 1870, via Wikimedia .
image2.jpeg
image3.jpeg
image1.jpeg
ChiefJosephDiscussion.docx
Chief Joseph Discussion
All primary discussion posts must be 100 words or more and at least 75 words when you are replying to another student and you must reply to at least one student.
Now that Chief Joseph has surrendered, what does he say he wants for himself and his people? Compare his post-surrender goals to those we traditionally associate with the American dream--are they more alike or more dissimilar? What accounts for that?
Response Paper #1
Please choose any two documents in the primary sources link for this chapter--included in the module--and write a 1-2 page paper (12-point font, double spaced) where you explore each of the following:
1) Who wrote these two documents?
2) What are they about?
3) How do they relate to the chapter reading you did?
4) How do they relate to each other?
5) What are some questions you have after reading these two documents?
Rubric
Response Papers
|
Response Papers |
||||
|
Criteria |
Ratings |
Pts |
||
|
This criterion is linked to a learning outcomeIntroducing Documents Must have title, author and source of the document |
|
20 pts |
||
|
This criterion is linked to a learning outcomeEvidence Evidence, including information and quotations, is synthesized and explained to thoroughly develop and convincingly support the thesis. |
|
20 pts |
||
|
This criterion is linked to a learning outcomeComparing documents Significant and nuanced connections between documents are made and these deepen or extend the argument. |
|
20 pts |
||
|
This criterion is linked to a learning outcomeComparing documents with chapter Significant and nuanced connections between documents are made and these deepen or extend the argument. |
|
20 pts |
||
|
This criterion is linked to a learning outcomeQuestions and perspective Question perspectives or perplexed narrative |
|
20 pts |
||
|
Total points: 100 |
Chapter Summary
The military aspect of the American Civil War lasted less than five years and ended in April 1865, but it would take another dozen years of Reconstruction to determine what the results of the war would be. The only questions clearly settled by the time of Appomattox were that the nation was indivisible and that slavery must end. The nation faced other issues with far-reaching implications. What would be the place of the freedmen in Southern society? How would the rebellious states be brought back into their "proper relationship" with the Union? The victorious North was in a position to dominate the South, but Northern politicians were not united in either resolve or purpose. For over two years after the fighting stopped, there was no coherent Reconstruction policy. Congress and the president struggled with each other, and various factions in Congress had differing views on politics, race, and union. Congress finally won control and dominated the Reconstruction process until Southern resistance and Northern ambivalence led to the end of Reconstruction in 1877. Enormous changes had taken place, but the era still left a legacy of continuing racism and sectionalism that was revealed when Southern whites established the Jim Crow system to evade the spirit of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. Meanwhile the South continued its colonial relationship with the North, and Southern plain folk, black and white, found themselves trapped by crop liens in circumstances some felt were almost as bad as slavery.