Top Banner
Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-12 1
99

Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

Osborne Hill
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Reconstruction

Dates:The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________

9-9-12 1

Page 2: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Foner Chapter 15"What Is Freedom?":

Reconstruction, 1865–1877

Page 3: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Introduction: Sherman Land

From the Plantation to the Senate

Page 11: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Blacks and the Meaning of Freedom– African Americans’ understanding of freedom was

shaped by their experience as slaves and observation of the free society around them.

– Blacks relished the opportunity to demonstrate their liberation from the regulations (significant and trivial) associated with slavery.

Page 12: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom to Ex Slaves• :

• Independence from white control

• Moving about – finding loved ones

• Using African American Churches –Withdrawing from white churches

• Schools – great thirst for education

9-9-12 12

Page 13: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Families in Freedom– The family was central to the postemancipation black

community.

– Freedom subtly altered relationships within the family.

• Emancipation increased power of black men within family.

• Black women withdrew from work as field laborers and house servants to the domestic sphere.

Page 14: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company

Family Record, a lithograph marketed to former slaves after the Civil War

Page 15: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Church and School– Blacks abandoned white-controlled religious

institutions to create churches of their own.

– Blacks of all ages flocked to the schools established by northern missionary societies, the Freedmen’s Bureau, and groups of ex-slaves.

Page 16: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Mother and Daughter Reading

Page 17: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

2) African American ex Slaves’ Vision:

• Land and Labor After Slavery

•Control over own laborgrow own food, not cash crops

• Political Freedom: Origins of African American Politics

• Who was involved? Ex soldiers, ministers, previously free blacks.

9-9-12 17

Page 18: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

3) Southern White Planters’ VisionCONTROL OF LABOR:• Knew ex slaves didn’t want to work for them• So, Whites refusal to rent or sell land to freedmen.• Black Codes

– strict control while working– Contracts – pay at end of one year– “Vagrancy” laws

•Response to Black efforts: Terror

9-9-12 18

Page 19: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Political Freedom– The right to vote became central to the former

slaves’ desire for empowerment and equality.

– To demonstrate their patriotism, blacks throughout the South organized Fourth of July celebrations.

Page 20: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Land, Labor, and Freedom– Former slaves’ ideas of freedom were directly

related to land ownership.• Many former slaves insisted that through their unpaid

labor they had acquired a right to the land.

Page 21: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Masters without Slaves– The South’s defeat was complete and

demoralizing.• Planter families faced profound changes.

– Most planters defined black freedom in the narrowest manner.

Page 22: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Map 15.1 The Barrow Plantation

Page 23: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• The Free Labor Vision– The victorious Republican North tried to

implement its own vision of freedom.• Free labor

– The goal of The Freedmen’s Bureau was to establish a working free labor system.

Page 24: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Freedmen’s Bureau

– The task of the Bureau:– establishing schools, providing aid to the poor and

aged, settling disputes, etc.

– Daunting, since it had fewer than 1,000 agents.

– The Bureau’s achievements in some areas, notably education and health care, were striking.

Page 25: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Freedmen’s Bureau, an engraving from Harper’s Weekly

Page 26: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Freedman’s Bureau

269-9-12

White SouthernAttack on Freeman’s Bureau

A Democratic Party broadside from electionof 1866 in Pennsylvania

Page 27: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

9-9-1es2

Freedman’s Bureau

Negroes at Freeman’s Bureau: A Positive Image27

Page 28: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Failure of Land Reform– President Andrew Johnson ordered nearly all land

in federal hands to be returned to its former owners.

– Because no land distribution took place, the vast majority of rural freed people remained poor & without property during Reconstruction.

Page 29: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Toward a New South– Sharecropping came to dominate the cotton

South and much of the tobacco areas.

– Sharecropping initially arose as a compromise between blacks’ desire for land and planters’ desire for labor discipline.

Page 30: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Map 15.2 Sharecropping in the South, 1880

Page 31: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• The White Farmer– Aftermath of the war hurt small white farmers.

– Crop-lien system was the use of crop as collateral for loans from merchants for supplies.

– White farmers increased cotton cultivation, cotton prices plummeted,

– They found themselves unable to pay back loans.

Page 32: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

– Both black and white farmers found themselves caught in the sharecropping and crop-lien systems.

• The Urban South– Southern cities experienced remarkable growth

after the Civil War.• Rise of a new middle class

Page 33: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Meaning of Freedom

• Aftermaths of Slavery– The Reconstruction-era debates over transitioning

from slavery to freedom had parallels in other Western Hemisphere countries where emancipation occurred in the nineteenth century.

– Only in the United States did former slaves gain political rights quickly.

Page 34: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Chinese laborers at work on Louisiana plantation during Reconstruction.

Page 35: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Making of Radical Reconstruction

• Andrew Johnson– Johnson identified himself as champion of “honest

yeomen” and foe of large planters.

– Johnson lacked Lincoln’s political skills and keen sense of public opinion.

– Johnson believed that African Americans had no role to play in Reconstruction.

Page 36: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

• Failure of Presidential Reconstruction– Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction offered pardons

to white southern elite.

– Johnson’s plan allowed new southern state governments free hand in managing local affairs.

Page 37: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

• The Black Codes– Southern governments began passing new laws

that restricted the freedom of blacks.

– These new laws violated free labor principles and created vigorous response from Republican North.

Page 38: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Selling a Freeman to Pay His Fine at Monticello, Florida

Page 39: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

• The Radical Republicans

– The Radical Republicans called for:– dissolution of Johnson’s state governments, – establishment of new governments that did

not have “rebels” in power, – and the guarantee of right to vote for black

men.

Page 40: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

– The Radicals fully embraced the expanded powers of the federal government that resulted from the Civil War.• Charles Summer• Thaddeus Stevens

Page 41: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Sen. Charles Sumner

1856 in senate! (pre Civil War)

9-9-12 41

Page 42: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Rep. Thaddeus Stevens

Of Pennsylvania

Page 43: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Radical Republicans

– Thaddeus Stevens’s most cherished aim was to confiscate the land of disloyal planters

– – and divide it among former slaves and

northern migrants to the South.

– His plan was too radical for most others in Congress.

Page 44: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

• The Origins of Civil Rights– Most Republicans were moderates, not radicals.

– A moderate senator proposed two bills to modify Johnson’s policy:

1. Extend the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau2. Civil Rights Bill (equality before the law was central;

sought to overturn the Black Codes)

– Johnson vetoed both bills.

Page 45: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

–Congress passed the Civil Rights Bill of 1866 over Pres. Johnson’s veto and later extended the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau.

Page 46: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company

A Democratic Party broadside from the election of 1866 in Pennsylvania

Page 47: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

President Andrew Johnson, in 1868 lithograph by Currier and Ives.

Page 48: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction

• The Fourteenth Amendment

– It put in Constitution the principle of citizenship for all persons born in the United States and empowered the federal government to protect the rights of all Americans.

• It did not grant blacks the right to vote.

Page 49: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (ratified 1868)

• Section 1.• All persons born or naturalized in the United

States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States;

Page 50: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

• nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;

• nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (ratified 1868)

Page 51: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The 14th Amendment

nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

The underlined parts known as:

9-9-12 51

the liberty clausethe due process clause the equal protection clause

of the 14th amendment

Page 52: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction

• Reconstruction Act of 1867– Johnson campaigned against the Fourteenth

Amendment in 1866 midterm elections.

– Over Johnson’s veto, Congress adopted the Reconstruction Act, which:

• Divided the South into five military districts; and• Called for creation of new southern state governments,

with black men given the vote.

Page 53: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

–The Reconstruction Act thus began Radical Reconstruction, which lasted until 1877.

Page 54: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction

• Impeachment and the Election of Grant– To demonstrate his dislike for Tenure of Office Act

Johnson removed the secretary of war from office in 1868.

– Johnson was impeached and Senate fell one vote short from removing him from office.

– Republicans nominated Grant for president in the 1868 election.

Page 55: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Presidential Election of 1868

Page 56: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

• Fifteenth Amendment– Ulysses S. Grant won 1868 presidential election.

– Fifteenth Amendment was ratified in 1870.

– Prohibited federal and state governments from denying any citizen right to vote because of race.

• It did not extend suffrage to women.

Page 57: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Celebrating the Fifteenth Amendment, 1870 lithograph

Page 58: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The “Great Constitutional Revolution”

– The laws and amendments of Reconstruction reflected intersection of two products of the Civil War era:1. A newly empowered national state; and2. The idea of a national citizenry enjoying equality

before the law.

– Before the Civil War, American citizenship had been closely linked to race.

Page 59: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

• B: The Amendments of Reconstruction: • 13th Amendment — Dec. 1865

• Forbade slavery • 14th Amendment — July 1868 • 15th Amendment — Feb. 1870 vote cannot be withheld because of color or race.

9-9-12 59

Page 60: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company

The First Vote, an engraving from Harper’s Weekly

Page 61: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction

• The “Great Constitutional Revolution”

– The new amendments also transformed relationship between federal government and the states.

Page 62: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction

• Boundaries of Freedom

– Even Republicans did not believe “universal rights” extended to all races.

– There was widespread discrimination against Asians.

Page 63: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Rights of Women

– Destruction of slavery led feminists to search for ways to make the promise of free labor real for women.

– Some feminists (Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony) opposed Fifteenth Amendment because it did not enfranchise women.

Page 64: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Rights of Women

– The divisions among feminists led to creation of two women’s rights organizations that would not reunite until the 1890s.

– Despite their limitations Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and Reconstruction Act of 1867 marked a radical departure in American and world history.

Page 65: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company

A Delegation of Advocates of Woman SuffrageAddressing the House

Page 66: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction in the South

Among former slaves:– the passage of the Reconstruction Act inspired an

outburst of political organization.– Blacks used direct action to remedy long-standing

grievances.– The Union League aided blacks in the public

sphere.– By 1870 the Union had been restored and

southern states had Republican majorities.

Page 67: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Electioneering at the South, an engraving from Harper’s Weekly

Page 68: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company

From the Plantation to the Senate

Page 69: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Sen. Hiram Rhodes Revels

• United States Senatorfrom Mississippi

• In officeFebruary 23, 1870 – March 3, 1871

9-9-12 69

Page 70: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction in the South

• The Black Officeholder

– Two thousand African Americans held public offices during Reconstruction.

• Fourteen elected to U.S. House of Representatives

• Two elected to U.S. Senate

Page 71: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Operations of the Registration Laws andNegro Suffrage in the South

Page 72: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Carpetbaggers and Scalawags

– Scalawags were southern-born white Republicans.

• Some were wealthy (e.g., James Alcorn, a Mississippi planter).

• Most had been up-country non-slaveholders before the Civil War and some had been Unionists during the war.

Page 73: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction in the South

• Southern Republicans in Power

– Southern Republican governments established the South’s first state-supported public schools.

– The new governments also pioneered civil rights legislation.

– Republican governments took steps to strengthen the position of rural laborers and to promote the South’s economic recovery.

Page 74: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Black students outside a schoolhouse in a post–CivilWar photograph. The teacher is seated at the far right.

Page 75: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Radical Reconstruction in the South

• The Quest for Prosperity

– During Reconstruction, every state helped to finance railroad construction.

– Investment opportunities in the West lured more northern investors than southern investors.

– Economic development remained weak in South.

Page 76: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• The Liberal Republicans

• The North’s Retreat

• The Triumph of the Redeemers

• Jim Crow & Segregation for African Americans

Page 77: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• Reconstruction’s Opponents

– Corruption existed during Reconstruction but it was not confined to a race, region, or party.

– Opponents could not accept the idea of former slaves voting, holding office, and enjoying equality before the law.

Page 78: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Winslow Homer’s 1876 painting

Page 79: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Murder of Louisiana, an 1873 cartoon

Page 80: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Overthrow of Reconstruction• “A Reign of Terror”

– Secret societies sprang up in the South with the aims of preventing blacks from voting and destroying the organization of the Republican Party.

– The Ku Klux Klan was organized in 1866.

• It launched what one victim called a “reign of terror” against black and white Republican leaders.

• Example: Colfax, Louisiana massacre (1873)

Page 81: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

•Terror: - the Ku Klux Klan

•D: White Resistance in the South

9-9-12 81

Page 82: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

A Prospective Scene in the City of Oaks

Page 83: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• “A Reign of Terror”

– With passage of three Enforcement Acts in 1870 and 1871 -

– Congress and President Grant put an end to the Ku Klux Klan by 1872.

Page 84: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Overthrow of Reconstruction

• The Liberal Republicans– The North’s commitment to Reconstruction

waned during the 1870s.

– Some Republicans, alienated from Grant by corruption in his administration, formed the Liberal Republican Party.

• Horace Greeley

Page 85: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Changes in graphic artist Thomas Nast’s depiction of blacks in Harper’s Weekly

Page 86: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Overthrow of Reconstruction• North’s Retreat

– The Liberal attack on Reconstruction contributed to a resurgence of racism in the North.

– 1873 depression also distracted the North from Reconstruction.

– Supreme Court whittled away at Congress’s guarantees of black rights.

• Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)• United States v. Cruikshank (1876)

Page 87: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Map 15.4 Reconstruction in the South, 1867–1877

Page 88: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• Triumph of the Redeemers

– Redeemers claimed to have “redeemed” the white South from corruption, misgovernment, and northern and black control.

Page 89: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• Disputed Election and Bargain of 1877

– Contest between Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) and Samuel Tilden (Democrat) was very close, with disputed electoral votes from Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina.

– Congress set up a special Electoral Commission to determine the winner of the disputed votes.

Page 90: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Map 15.5 The Presidential Election of 1876

Page 91: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• Disputed Election & Bargain of 1877

– Behind the scenes, Hayes made a bargain to allow southern white Democrats to control the South if his election was accepted.

– The compromise led to Hayes’s election and gave the Democrats a free hand in the South.

Page 92: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

• The End of Reconstruction– Reconstruction ended in 1877.

– It would be nearly a century before the nation again tried to bring equal rights to the descendants of slaves.

Page 93: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Second Reconstruction:

• Civil Rights Era - (1950s- 1960s)

9-9-12 93

Page 94: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Is This a Republican Form of Government?

Page 95: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

This concludes the lecture presentation for

For more learning resources, head to our StudySpace at:http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/give-me-liberty3-brief/

© 2012 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Chapter 15: "What Is Freedom?": Reconstruction, 1865–1877

Page 96: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Reviewing the American People’s Core Freedoms:

(the freedoms we do have)

9-9-12 96

Page 97: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

The Jewels in Our Crown of Freedoms

(with us all being the royalty :)

• 13th Amendment (ending Slavery)• 14th Amendment• Bill of Rights (Amendments 1-10)• Constitutional Court• George Washington giving us Civilian

Government• Separation of Power• Broad Franchise 9-9-12 97

Page 98: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Broadened Franchiseincludes:

• 14th & 15th Amendment• 19th Amendment• 24th Amendment• Civil Rights Acts (1960s)

– Including the Voting Rights Acts

9-9-12 98

Page 99: Reconstruction Dates: The Civil War?_________ Reconstruction? ________ 9-9-121.

Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & CompanyUncle Sam’s Thanksgiving Dinner, an engraving by Thomas

Nast from Harper’s Weekly