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Reconstruction Flashcards

Reconstruction was the period of time after the Civil War during which the Southern states were rebuilt and readmitted to the Union. After the Civil war, much of the South lay in ruins. Cities were destroyed, railroad tracks had been pulled up, and the South's financial system was wrecked (Confederate money was worthless and southern bank depositors lost all their money). Republicans in Congress felt President Lincoln's and President Johnson's plans to reconstruct the South were too lenient. Congress took control of Reconstruction from Johnson, sought to break the power of the southern planters, and ensure the freedmen's right to vote. During Reconstruction laws and Amendments were adopted to ensure African Americans rights and opportunities. Unfortunately, those rights and opportunities were for the most part lost after Reconstruction ended.
Lincoln wanted to quickly restore the Union. In a speech in 1865 he said "With malice towards none, with charity toward all...let us strive to bind up the nation's wounds." Republicans in Congress felt his plan was too lenient and rejected it. Congress and Lincoln were able to agree on the creation of the Freedmen's Bureau. It provided food and clothing to former slaves and set up schools to educate them. Lincoln was assassinated and his Vice President, Andrew Johnson became President.
Johnson's Reconstruction plan was also seen as too easy on the South by Republicans in Congress. Radical Republicans wanted to take control of Reconstruction from President Johnson. Although under his plan the 13th Amendment, forbidding slavery, was ratified, his plan also allowed former Confederates to remain in power in the South and even to be elected to Congress. After the election of 1866, Radical Republicans in Congress took control of Reconstruction. The period of time that the Radical Republicans were in control of Reconstruction is know as Radical Reconstruction.
The South underwent many changes during Radical Reconstruction. Radical Republicans worked to achieve two additional goals - to protect the rights of freedmen, particularly the right to vote, and to break the power of the southern planters. The Civil Rights Act of 1866 and the 14th Amendment made freedmen citizens. The 15th Amendment granted African American men the right to vote. Efforts were made to broaden the southern economy by building up industry - after Reconstruction these new industries came be known as the "New South." Republicans came to power in the southern state governments. They were opposed by white Conservatives, who worked to regain control. The Ku Klux Klan, a terrorist hate group, tried to deny African American rights by committing acts of violence against them and others. By 1877, Republican control had ended in the South.
After Reconstruction ended, African American lost rights and opportunities. Jim Crows laws established segregation, the legal separation of the races. The Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson upheld those laws. Poll taxes, a tax paid to vote, and literacy tests, which required voters to explain a passage of the Constitution, were used to prevent African Americans from voting. The system of sharecropping kept many Africans Americans locked into a cycle of poverty and dependent on the former planters.

Terms : Hide Images
1940867127freedmenmen and women who had been slaves0
1940867128Reconstructionrebuilding of the South after the Civil War1
1940867129Ten Percent PlanLincoln's plan that allowed a southern state to form a new government after 10 percent of its voters swore an oath of loyalty to the United States2
1940867130amnestygovernment pardon3
1940867131Wade-Davis Billan 1864 plan for Reconstruction that denied the right to vote or hold office to anyone who had volunteered to fight for the Confederacy4
1940867132Freedmen's Bureaugovernment agency founded during Reconstruction to help former slaves5
1940867133Thirteenth Amendmentan 1865 amendment to the United States Constitution that bans slavery throughout the nation6
1940867134black codesSouthern laws that severely limited the rights of African Americans after the Civil War7
1940867135Radical Republicansmembers of Congress during Reconstruction who wanted to ensure that freedmen received the right to vote8
1940867136Fourteenth Amendmentan 1868 amendment to the United States Constitution that guarantees equal protection of the laws9
1940867137Radical Reconstructionperiod beginning in 1867, when the Republicans who had control in both houses of Congress, took charge of Reconstruction10
1940867138Reconstruction Actan 1867 law that threw out the southern state governments that had refused to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment11
1940867139impeachto bring charges of serious wrongdoing against a public official12
1940867140Fifteenth Amendmentamendment to the United States Constitution that forbids any state to deny African Americans the right to vote because of race13
1940867141scalawagwhite Southerner who supported the Republicans during Reconstruction14
1940867142carpetbaggeruncomplimentary nick-name for a northerner who went to the South after the Civil War15
1940867143Ku Klux Klansecret society organized after the Civil War to reassert white supremacy by means of violence16
1940867144sharecropperperson who rents a plot of land from another person and farms it in exchange for a share of the crop17
1940867145poll taxtax required before a person can vote18
1940867146literacy testexamination to see if a person can read and write; used in the past to restrict voting rights19
1940867147grandfather clauselaw that excused a voter from a literacy test if his father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 186720
1940867148segregationlegal separation of people based on racial, ethnic, or other differences21
1940867149Plessy v. Fergusonan 1896 court case in which the United States Supreme Court ruled that segregation in public facilities was legal as long as the facilities were equal22

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