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