People
Reconstruction
Problems for Presidents
Freedmen
Conflicts
100

Plantation Owners

Lost their slaves and source of wealth

Land initially seized by government, but reasserted the power structures of slavery. 

100

What was Reconstruction?

The federal government’s controversial effort to
 
1. Repair the damage to the
    South
2. Reunite the Southern states
    (including Freedmen and
    the issues they faced)

100

Radical Republicans

Achieved control of Congress in 1866. 

Wanted harsher sanctions on Confederates. 

Pushed for civil rights for freedmen. 

Clashed with Southern Democrat Johnson

100

Freedmen

  • Had freedom but faced a poor economy, freedom didn’t give them the resources to survive

  • At the end of the war many were homeless,unemployed, &
    uneducated

  • Some freedmen moved to cities or out 

west looking for work

100

Why did Reconstruction end?

  • Heavy taxes

  • Corruption

  • Lack of support from North

  • S. Democrats undermining many reforms, taking back control of state governments.

200

Poor White Southerners

Competed with freedmen for jobs, lost social status, some migrated West

200

How many plans were there for Reconstruction and what were they?

Lincoln Plan: 1863-1865

Johnson Plan: 1865

Congressional Plan: 1866-1877

200

Tenure of Office Act

President could not fire officials without Senate approval, AJ fired Sec. of War Edwin Stanton (who supported Rad Recon) to test Congress 🡪 formal charges against him 

200

Freedmen’s Bureau

  • Helped former slaves; provided
    food, shelter, schools, medical, legal help.

  • Unpopular with white Southerners

  • Failed by 1872 b/c it couldn’t overcome Southern hostility & lack of political support.

200

Black Codes

  • Limited jobs to only unskilled labor

  • Set curfews

  • Beginnings of segregation

300

Scalawags

Name Democrats gave to white Southern Republicans

300

Lincoln's Plan

10 Percent Plan: once 10% of voters from 1860 took an oath of allegiance to the US, the state could form a new government

Designed to readmit South quickly; nothing about freedmen

300

The Trail and Aftermath

Escaped removal from office by one vote!
Johnson continued to veto Reconstruction bills, but Congress had the numbers to outvote him. AJ lost the nomination for the Election of 1868.

300

Sharecropping

  • Landowner allows renters to use the land in return for a share of the crop, but . . .  

    • Needed tools, livestock → huge debts. 

    • Tenant Farmers: paid cash rather than a portion of the crops

    • Many freedmen & poor white people are sharecroppers

300

Disenfranchisement

  • To prevent someone from voting

  • Various methods:

    1. poll taxes, grandfather laws
    2. literacy tests
    3. threats of violence

400

Ulysses S. Grant

1869-1877

Supported by radicals, Promoted Civil Rights, helped pass the 15th amendants, anti KKK law

400

Wade-Davis Bill

Stated that Congress should direct Reconstruction

400

Panic of 1873

Investors took on more debt than they could afford, Major distraction, Reconstruction no longer the priority 

400

13th Amendant 

Abolished Slavery, 1865

400

The Lost Cause Progranda

Goal was to deny African-Americans their rights and keep them in the role of submissive laborers.  

500

Carpetbaggers

Northerners who moved South

500

Johnson's Plan

Democrat from TN

Sympathized with poor whites

Plan stated that the South must accept 13th amendment

Nothing about freedmen

500

The Compromise of 1877

Tilden won popular vote

  • Dems agreed to make Hayes president if all federal troops were removed from the South

  • Lead to the end of reconstruction

500

Limits to Freedmen’s Rights

  • Disenfranchisement 

  • Black codes

  • Hate groups



500

Ku Klux Klan

  • Founded in 1866 in TN by 6 former Confederates 

  • Congress tried to block their actions, but laws were not well enforced

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