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Day 80 : The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877. Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 3, 2011 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green. The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877. Objectives: Define the major problems facing the nation and the South after the Civil War. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Day 80: The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877Baltimore Polytechnic Institute
January 3, 2011A.P. U.S. History
Mr. Green
Objectives: Define the major problems facing the nation and the South after the Civil War.Describe the responses of both whites and African Americans to the end of slavery.Analyze the differences between the presidential and congressional approaches to Reconstruction.Explain how the blunders of President Johnson and the resistance of the white South opened the door to the Republicans’ radical Reconstruction
AP FocusThe Union victory is significant in transforming and diversifying the South’s production. It also represents the defeat of the planter-slaveholder and the continued rise of the industrial capitalist.In the aftermath of the war, especially in those southern states that reenter the Union under Johnson’s lenient plan, Black Codes again segregate and subordinate the South’s blacks. Organizations, such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Knights of the White Camellia, use violence and intimidation to deny blacks access to institutions, such as voting, that would improve their lives. Blacks are reduced to a form of slavery without chains, in that they are economically dependent and subservient to the owner of the land on which they are sharecroppers.
The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877
CHAPTER THEMES Johnson’s political blunders and Southern white
recalcitrance led to the imposition of congressional military Reconstruction on the South. Reconstruction did address difficult issues of reform and racial justice in the South and achieved some successes, but was ultimately abandoned, leaving a deep legacy of racial and sectional bitterness.During Reconstruction, the Constitution was strengthened with the Fourteenth (citizenship and equal protection of the laws) and Fifteenth (black voting rights) Amendments, but it was also tested with the conflicts between the president and Congress that culminated in an impeachment process.
Chapter Focus
Decades Chart 1860’s-Due TodayFocus Questions Chapter 22-Due January 4
Announcements
The Ku Klux Klan, Tennessee, 1868
This night-riding terrorist has even masked the identity of his horse.
“Invisible Empire of the South”Founded in Tennessee-1866First taste of water since he had been killed
at the Battle of ShilohFright then forceMost took the hint and stayed away from the
pollsCongress passed Force Act of 1870/1871South responded with disenfranchising blacks
with literacy tests
The Ku Klux Klan
Impeachment Drama
The impeachment proceedings against President Andrew Johnson, among the most severe constitutional crises in the Republic’s history, were high political theater, and tickets were in sharp demand.
Radicals accused Johnson of keeping a harem of “dissolute women”
Congress pass the Tenure of Office Act in 1867 to require the president to secure consent of the Senate before an appointee could be removed
Johnson removed Edwin Stanton, secretary of war in 1868
Johnson Walks the Impeachment Plant
Impeachment became biggest show of 1868Missed the guilty verdict by 1 voteThe next in line was not a better choice,
Benjamin Wad, President pro tempore of the Senate
Was not guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors”
A Not-Guilty Verdict for Johnson
Russia wanted to sell off some of its empireDid not want to lose it to Britain in a warWilliam Seward paid $7.2 million
Seward’s FollyThe Tsars had been friendly to the North
during the Civil WarLater discoveries of natural gas and oil
proved the importance of Alaska
The Purchase of Alaska
Alaska and the Lower Forty-eight States (a size comparison)
The South resented Reconstruction for:1. Upending the social structure2. Destroying the racial system 3. Empowering former slaves4. Federal intervention in local issuesDifficult to develop the right policy
The Heritage of Reconstruction
Is This a Republican Form of Government? by Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, 1876
The nation’s most prominent political cartoonist expressed his despair at the tragic way that Reconstruction had ended— with few real gains for the former slaves.
Continue Reading Chapter 22 Prepare for 10 question reading check on
Chapter 22 on Wednesday Study guide will be distributed on
Wednesday for Mid-Term
Homework