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Reconstruction and the Changing South U.S. History Chapter 18
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Reconstruction and the Changing South

Feb 12, 2016

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Reconstruction and the Changing South. U.S. History Chapter 18. POSTWAR PROBLEMS. War changed southern society forever. Suddenly, there was a new class of 4 million people known as freedman, men and women who had been slaves. POSTWAR PROBLEMS. Major cities were ruined - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Reconstruction and the Changing South

Reconstruction and the Changing South

U.S. HistoryChapter 18

Page 2: Reconstruction and the Changing South

POSTWAR PROBLEMS

War changed southern society forever. Suddenly, there was a new class of 4 million people known as freedman, men and women who had been slaves.

Page 3: Reconstruction and the Changing South

POSTWAR PROBLEMS

• Major cities were ruined

• Transportation system was destroyed

• Returning soldiers faced economic uncertainty.

Page 4: Reconstruction and the Changing South

STEPS TO RECONSTRUCTION

• Lincoln wanted to make rejoining the Union easy for the Southern states.

• Amnesty: government pardon

Page 5: Reconstruction and the Changing South

STEPS TO RECONSTRUCTION

• Freedmen’s Bureau: government agency to help former slaves

• Bureau gave food and clothing and helped freedmen find jobs.

• Bureau set up schools for freedmen.

Page 6: Reconstruction and the Changing South

JOHNSON BECOMES PRESIDENT

• Conflicts erupted in Congress because Republicans disapproved of Johnson’s Reconstruction plan.

• Republicans believed Johnson’s plan was too lenient.

Page 7: Reconstruction and the Changing South

JOHNSON BECOMES PRESIDENT

• Southern states agreed to ratify the 13th amendment and win Presidential approval to rejoin the Union.

• 13th amendment banned slavery throughout the nation.

Page 8: Reconstruction and the Changing South

SOUTH RESISTS RECONSTRUCTION

Southern legislatures passed black codes, laws that severely limited the rights of freedmen.

Page 9: Reconstruction and the Changing South

SOUTH RESISTS RECONSTRUCTION

• Outraged Republicans vowed to develop a stricter Reconstruction plan.

• They thought that black codes deprived African Americans of equal opportunities.

Page 10: Reconstruction and the Changing South

SOUTH RESISTS RECONSTRUCTION

• Violence toward African Americans increased in the South.

• Literacy tests were required for freedmen to know sections of the Constitution in order to vote.

Page 11: Reconstruction and the Changing South

RISE OF RADICALS

• Radical Republicans wanted to ensure freedmen the right to vote.

• Gained power by joining forces with moderate Republicans to reduce power of southern Democrats.

Page 12: Reconstruction and the Changing South

RISE OF RADICALS

• Radical Republicans were led by Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner

• Sumner’s “Monstrous Power” was slavery; he thought Johnson’s actions were allowing slavery to continue in the South.

Page 13: Reconstruction and the Changing South

IMPEACHMENT

• Radical Republicans wanted to remove President Johnson from office by impeachment, or bringing formal charges, against him.

• Johnson was not impeached; Congress cannot remove a President just because they disagreed with him.

Page 14: Reconstruction and the Changing South

NEW FORCES IN POLITICS

• Southern leaders lost influence

• Scalawag: term for Southern white Republican who supported Reconstruction

• Carpetbaggers: Northerners who moved South for profit

Page 15: Reconstruction and the Changing South

NEW FORCES IN POLITICS

• Joining transplanted Northerners in the new Southern politics were African Americans.

• Some states unfairly used laws allowing poll taxes, or fees to vote, to deny African Americans the right to vote.

Page 16: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CONSERVATIVES RESIST• Southerners were

determined real power would remain with whites.

• A secret organization, Ku Klux Klan, spread terror to keep African Americans out of office.

Page 17: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CONSERVATIVES RESIST

• An outbreak of violence in New Orleans against African Americans helped persuade voters to elect a Republican Congress in 1866.

• Segregation: legal separation of the races

Page 18: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CHALLENGE OF REBUILDING

Reconstruction governments raised taxes to cover the costs of rebuilding the South.

Page 19: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CHALLENGE OF REBUILDING• South developed its

own natural resources for making clothing to develop industry after the Civil War.

• Furniture makers used lumber from southern forests to manufacture tables and chairs.

Page 20: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CYCLE OF POVERTY

• Many freedmen and poor whites went to work on plantation. Sharecroppers rented and farmed a plot.

• Most freedmen met their basic needs by returning to the land where they had worked as slaves.

Page 21: Reconstruction and the Changing South

CYCLE OF POVERTY

Sharecroppers would become trapped in poverty because they could not earn enough money to pay their debts to the landowner.

Page 22: Reconstruction and the Changing South

END OF RECONSTRUCTION

• Radical Republicans lost power with stories of corruption in President Grant’s administration.

• Rutherford Hayes promised to remove all federal troops stationed in the South to gain southern votes.

Page 23: Reconstruction and the Changing South

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