Reconstruction
American History Before
1877
Aftermath of the Civil War
Union
celebration
The Grand Review of Union
Troops in Victory
Aftermath of the Civil War
Union
celebration
Scars
from a long, bloody, destructive war
◦
The North mourns its last casualty
Lincoln’s funeral
procession, Pennsylvania Ave.
Lines at City Hall, New
York
Aftermath of the Civil War
Union
celebration
Scars
from a long, bloody, destructive war
◦
The North mourns its last casualty
◦
The South in ruins
◦
Economic chaos
◦
Capital destroyed
◦
Occupied by Union troops
Everywhere,
scarred and maimed veterans
Remembering the War
Monuments
to the fallen in every village and town
◦
First Memorial Day, 1866
Religious Impact of the
Civil War
Protestantism
loses much self-confidence
◦
Religion could not prevent the tragedy
◦
Both sides suffered terribly
◦
What did God mean by the Civil War?
Cynicism:
certainty caused the war?
Materialistic
society; idealism suspect
◦
Mark Twain: The Gilded Age (1873)
Rise of
agnosticism
◦
Effect of war, and Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species (1859)
◦
Robert G. Ingersoll, Union veteran, popular speaker & writer
Unfulfilled promises
After
slavery
◦
“Forty acres and a mule”
◦
Testing freedom
◦
Traveling
◦
Creating own institutions
◦
Getting married
◦
Search for a new racial-labor system
◦
Wage labor
◦
Sharecropping and tenancy
◦
Debt peonage
Reconstructing the South
Wartime
Reconstruction
◦
Abraham Lincoln’s 10% Plan, 1863
◦
Deadlock with Congress
◦
Lincoln’s plan rejected as too lenient
◦
Wade-Davis Bill: Harsher 50% plan blocked by Lincoln, 1864
President
Andrew Johnson’s plan, 1865
◦
“Get tough” approach
◦
The problem of pardons…
◦
The Black Codes
◦
Restricted owning or leasing property, conduct business, move in
public, work (vagrancy laws)
◦
Rise of convict leasing system
Congressional
Reconstruction
Congress
takes over, 1866
◦
Freedman’s Bureau extended
◦
Black schools, health care, labor agency
◦
Founding black colleges: Howard, Fisk, Morehouse, etc.
◦
Civil Rights Acts of 1866
◦
Overrides Black Codes
◦
Fourteenth Amendment
◦
Made blacks citizens
◦
Protected rights
Congressional
Reconstruction
Overwhelming
radical Republican victory, 1866
Military
Reconstruction Act of 1867
◦
South divided into military districts
◦
15th Amendment passed
◦
Southern states must accept 14th and 15th Amendments
◦
Reconstruction proceeds fairly quickly
Johnson
obstructs and Congress impeaches
◦
Tried and acquitted by one vote, 1868
“Redemption” of the South
The
Republican Reconstruction coalition
◦
Blacks, Northerners, sympathetic Southerners
◦
Unstable coalition: racial and sectional tensions
Terrorism:
the Ku Klux Klan
◦
Northern troops the only protection
◦
Grant elected President, 1868
◦
Suppresses KKK, 1871
◦
Battles with armed White Leagues, 1874-76
◦
Assassinations of Republicans, massacres of blacks
◦
Worst: Colfax Massacre, 1873: 280 blacks killed
End of Reconstruction
Depression
of 1873 hurts Republicans
Election
of 1876
◦
Democrat Samuel J. Tilden, anti-corruption N.Y. governor
◦
Republican Rutherford B. Hayes, Union veteran, OH governor
Tilden
wins popular vote
Four
states have disputed electoral votes
Congressional
commission deadlocks on party lines
Republicans
agree to end Reconstruction
◦
Two days before inauguration day, March 2, 1877