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RECONSTRUCTION & THE NEW
SOUTH 1865-1900
Fallout from the Civil
War
• By the end of the Civil War -
destruction in the former
Confederacy was unparalleled in
American History.
• 258,000 Confederate soldiers died;
significant amounts of private
property destroyed
• “Lost Cause” - southern myth
which looked back at southern life
pre-civil war
• Over 200,000 African Americans
involved in the war were spread
out looking to reunite with lost
families, etc.
Mr. Jefferson...?
Civil War Fatalities

in Comparison to Other Wars
Problems with Peacemaking
• Economic chaos - infrastructure lost including RR, farms, bridges, etc
• Social Confusion
• Aristocratic planters lost wealth and power to new bankers, merchants and small
farmers
• Changing status of blacks created social tensions
• Political uncertainty
• State and local gov’ts had to be organized with relation to the Union
• Political leaders of the North differed sharply over what should be done
• Quarrels/infighting among Republican party
Critical Thinking
Questions
1. How did the role of the federal
government change as a result of the
Civil War and Reconstruction?
2. In what ways did the events of the Civil
War and Reconstruction amount to a
revolution?
3. What is the “New South” and who
promoted it?
4. Some historians have called
Reconstruction a “Glorious Failure”?
How accurate is this description?
Key Questions for the Union
1. How to 

bring the South

back into the 

Union?
2. How to 

rebuild the South

after its

destruction 

during the war?
3. How to 

integrate and

protect newly-

emancipated

black freedmen?
4. What branch

of government

should control

the process of

Reconstruction?
Stages of Reconstruction
1. Presidential Reconstruction (1863-1866)
2. Congressional (or Radical) Reconstruction
(1867-1877)
3. Redemption (1877-1900) (creation of the “New
South”)
PRESIDENTIAL
RECONSTRUCTION
1863-1866
PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION
10% Plan
*Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(December 8, 1863)
*Replace majority rule with “loyal rule” in the
South.
*He didn’t consult Congress regarding
Reconstruction.
*Pardon to all but the highest ranking military and
civilian Confederate officers.
*When 10% of the voting population in the 1860
election had taken an oath of loyalty and
established a government, it would be recognized.
Thaddeus Stevens
Charles Sumner
PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION
• Lincoln’s Assassination(April 14, 1865)
• John Wilkes Booth
Ford’s Theatre, April 1865 John Wilkes Booth (1862)
Wade-Davis Bill (1864)
★Required 50% of the number of 1860
voters to take an “iron clad” oath of
allegiance (swearing they had never
voluntarily aided the rebellion ).
★Required a state constitutional
convention before the election of state
officials.
★Enacted specific safeguards of
freedmen’s liberties.
Senator

Benjamin

Wade

(R-OH)
Congressman

Henry

W. Davis

(R-MD)
13th Amendment
- Ratified in December, 1865.
- Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place
subject to their jurisdiction.
- Congress shall have power to enforce this article by
appropriate legislation.
Freedmen’s Bureau (1865)
★ Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen,
and Abandoned Lands.
★ Many former northern
abolitionists risked their lives to
help southern freedmen.
★ Called “carpetbaggers” by white
southern Democrats.
Freedmen’s Bureau Seen Through 

Southern Eyes
Plenty to eat and
nothing to do.
President Andrew Johnson
Jacksonian Democrat.
Anti-Aristocrat.
White Supremacist.
Agreed with Lincoln

that states had never

legally left the Union.
Damn the negroes! I am fighting these
traitorous aristocrats, their masters!
President Johnson’s Plan (10%+)
- Offered amnesty upon simple oath to all except 

Confederate civil and military officers and those with property over $20,000
(they could apply directly to Johnson)
- In new constitutions, they must accept minimum

conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts.
- Named provisional governors in Confederate states and called them to
oversee elections for constitutional conventions.
EFFECTS?
1. Disenfranchised certain leading Confederates.
2. Pardoned planter aristocrats brought them back 

to political power to control state organizations.
3. Republicans were outraged that planter elite 

were back in power in the South!
Radical Republican Motives
•Dislike for Johnson, thought him unworthy
•Fear of executive encroachment upon authority of Congress
• Lincoln did expand executive branch to largest it had ever
been
•Desire by Radical Republicans to protect Freedmen
•wanted to redistribute confiscated southern land to blacks and
poor whites
•resentment over return of former Confederates to political
power
- Congress bars Southern

Congressional delegates.
- Joint Committee on 

Reconstruction created.
- February, 1866 à President

vetoed the Freedmen’s

Bureau bill.
- March, 1866 à Johnson

vetoed the 1866 Civil Rights Act.
- Congress passed both bills over 

Johnson’s vetoes à 1st in 

U. S. history
Congress Ends Presidential Reconstruction
Growing Northern Alarm!
Many Southern state constitutions fell short of
minimum requirements.
Johnson granted 13,500 special pardons.
Revival of southern defiance.
BLACK CODES
Black Codes
Purpose:
Guarantee stable labor 

supply now that blacks 

were emancipated.
Restore pre-emancipation

system of race relations.

Forced many blacks to become
sharecroppers [tenant farmers].
Johnson the Martyr / Samson
“If my blood is to be shed because I
vindicate the Union and the
preservation of this government in its
original purity and character, let it be
shed; let an altar to the Union be
erected, and then, if it is necessary,
take me and lay me upon it, and the
blood that now warms and animates
my existence shall be poured out as a
fit libation to the Union.” 

(February 1866)
-Ratified in July, 1868.
- Provide a constitutional guarantee of the rights and security of freed
people.
- Insure against neo-Confederate political power.
- Enshrine the national debt while repudiating that of the Confederacy.
-Southern states would be punished for denying the right to
vote to black citizens!
- Civil authorities in the territories were subject to military
supervision.
- Required new state constitutions, including

black suffrage and ratification of the 13th and 14th
Amendments.
- In March, 1867, Congress passed an act that authorized the
military to enroll eligible black voters and begin the process of
constitution making.
Radical Plan for Readmission
What is the Radical Plan?
Reconstruction Acts of 1867:
• Constitutions and governments set up under the
Johnson plan were thrown out
• Military supervision of civil authorities
• “Ironclad oath”
• New state constitutions with black suffrage
• Ratification of the Thirteenth & Fourteenth
Amendments
• Military supervision of voter registration (e.g.
freedmen) and of constitution making.
Reconstruction Acts of 1867
Military
Reconstruction
Act
Restart
Reconstruction in
the 10 Southern
states that refused to
ratify the 14th
Amendment.
Divide the 10
“unreconstructed
states” into 5
military 

districts.
Command of the Army Act
The President must issue all Reconstruction orders through 

the commander of the military.
Tenure of Office Act
The President could not remove 

any officials [esp. Cabinet members] without the Senate’s
consent, if the position originally required Senate approval.
Designed to protect radical

members of Lincoln’s government.
A question of the 

constitutionality of this law. Edwin Stanton
Johnson removed Stanton in February, 1868.
Johnson replaced generals in the field who were more
sympathetic to Radical Reconstruction.
The House impeached him on February 24 

before even

drawing up the

charges by a 

vote of 126 – 47
The Senate Trial
11 week trial.
Johnson acquitted 

35 to 19 (one short of required 2/3s
vote).
Johnny Rebel - I'm A Good Old Rebel Lyrics (1914
Maj. James Randolph)
Oh, I'm a good old rebel,
Now thats just what I am,
And for this yankee nation,
I do no give a damn.
I'm glad I fought a ganner,
I only wish we won.
I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done.
I hates the yankee nation and everything they do.
I hates the declaration of independence, too.
I hates the glorious union, t'is dripping with our blood.
I hates the striped banner, and fit it all I could
I rode with Robert E. Lee,
For three years, thereabout.
Got wounded in four places,
And I starved at point lookout.
I catched the rheumatism
A campin' in the snow.
But I killed a chance of Yankees
And I'd like to kill some more.
3 hundred thousand Yankees
Is stiff in southern dust.
We got 3 hundred thousand
Before they conquered us
They died of Southern Fever
And southern steel and shot
I wish there were 3 million
Instead of what we got.
I can't pick up my musket
And fight 'um down no more
But I ain't gonna love 'um
Now that is certain sure
And I don't want no pardon
For what I was and am
I won't be reconstructed
And I do not give a damn
Oh, I'm a good old rebel,
Now that's just what I am,
And for this yankee nation,
I do no give a damn.
I'm glad I fought a ganner,
I only wish we won.
I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done.
I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done.
Sharecropping
Tenancy & the Crop Lien System
Furnishing Merchant Tenant Farmer Landowner
▪Loan tools and seed up to
60% interest to tenant farmer
to plant spring crop.

▪Farmer also secures 

food, clothing, and

other necessities on

credit from merchant until
the harvest.

▪Merchant holds
“lien” {mortgage} on part of
tenant’s future crops as
repayment of debt.
▪Plants crop, harvests in
autumn.

▪Turns over up to ½ of crop to
land owner as payment of
rent.

▪Tenant gives remainder of
crop to merchant in

payment of debt.
▪Rents land to tenant in
exchange for ¼ 

to ½ of tenant farmer’s future
crop.
Black & White Political Participation
Colored Rule

in the South?
Core voters were black veterans.
Blacks were politically unprepared.
Blacks could register and vote in states since 1867.
The 15th Amendment
guaranteed

federal voting.
- Ratified in 1870.
- The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied
or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race,
color, or previous condition of servitude.
- The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by
appropriate legislation.
- Women’s rights groups were furious that they were not granted the
vote
The “Invisible Empire of the South”
- Enforcement Acts of 1870 & 1871 [also known as the
KKK Act].
- “The Lost Cause.”
- The rise of the

“Bourbons.”
- Redeemers (prewar

Democrats and Union
Whigs).
- Crime for any individual to deny full &

equal use of public conveyances and

public places.
- Prohibited discrimination in jury 

selection.
- Shortcoming à lacked a strong

enforcement mechanism.
- No new civil rights act was attempted

for 90 years!
“Grantism” & corruption.
Panic of 1873 [6-year depression].
Concern over westward

expansion and Indian wars.
Key monetary issues:
should the government retire $432m
worth of “greenbacks” issued during the
Civil War.
should war bonds be paid back in specie
or greenbacks.
Election of 1876
•Tilden v. Hayes (Rep) Tilden won popular vote
and 184 of electoral.
•Election went to a panel of 15 voters: 7
went to Tilden/7 to Hayes
•Last vote undecided
•Goes to congress where a deal is struck
•Deal is.....Hayes wins election but
Reconstruction troops in the South are
removed.
•Result is 100 years of segregation in the South
How does this
“deal” compare to
the “corrupt
bargain” of 1824?
Compromise of 1877
•Deal to put Hayes into office with
promise to end Reconstruction.
•Was necessary as there was no
clear majority winner despite
Tilden owning a slight edge in
popular vote.
• How bad of a decision was this?
What is worse - the compromises
leading up to the Civil War
regarding slavery or afterwards
regarding Reconstruction?
The Political Crisis of 1877
- “Corrupt Bargain”

Part II?
Civil Rights case of 1883
• Supreme Court declared Civil Rights Act of 1875
void (provided “the full and equal enjoyment” of
public facilities)
• Stepping stone towards segregation
• Jim Crow: Segregation Laws in place until 1964
• Jim Crow Laws segregated blacks from whites
in all public areas including: hospitals,
bathrooms, buses, schools, and parks.
• Plessy v. Ferguson 1896: Supreme Court rules
that “separate but equal” is constitutional
• Mississippi v. Williams: Supreme Court
approval of Mississippi Plan (implementation of
literacy tests prior to voting)
Home Rule in the South
•Redeemers: voided
Reconstruction and gave new
rules for the South. “Saved” the
South from carpetbaggers.
•Southern fear of Carpetbaggers/
anger towards Union results in
South blocking Northern
investors.
•Using the Plessy v. Ferg ruling, the
South formal takes back control in
1877
New South
• Agriculturally - Old large plantations divided
up and used for sharecropping
• Industrially - massive exploitation of
Southern resources in an attempt to catch up
to Northern industry. (expansion of RRs)
• Politically - power base of Southern
Democrats was the wealthy former
confederates who wanted segregation and
disenfranchisement
• Living Standards - very poor population,
especially blacks. Only wealthy elite enjoyed
a comfortable lifestyle.
Booker T. Washington
• Atlanta Compromise: Booker T.
Washington is OK with segregation and
the abandonment of Reconstruction.
• Washington believes that equality will
come from economic growth in the
black community instead of civil rights.
• Close the racial gap with
accommodation
• Supported technical training for blacks
and improving the labor force rather
than focusing on civil rights agendas
• Blacks needed to prove their worth
to society first
W.E.B. DuBois
• post 1900
• Anti-Booker T. Washington - sought
civil rights and higher education
(college)
• First African American to receive a
doctorate from Harvard (1895)
• Felt blacks should receive an advanced
education so the black community
would have well-educated leaders.
• Civil Rights proponent who wanted
immediate, legal changes. Established
the NAACP (1909) and The Crisis
newsletter. Also published The Souls
of Black Folks

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APUSH Lecture Ch. 15

  • 1. RECONSTRUCTION & THE NEW SOUTH 1865-1900
  • 2. Fallout from the Civil War • By the end of the Civil War - destruction in the former Confederacy was unparalleled in American History. • 258,000 Confederate soldiers died; significant amounts of private property destroyed • “Lost Cause” - southern myth which looked back at southern life pre-civil war • Over 200,000 African Americans involved in the war were spread out looking to reunite with lost families, etc.
  • 4. Civil War Fatalities
 in Comparison to Other Wars
  • 5. Problems with Peacemaking • Economic chaos - infrastructure lost including RR, farms, bridges, etc • Social Confusion • Aristocratic planters lost wealth and power to new bankers, merchants and small farmers • Changing status of blacks created social tensions • Political uncertainty • State and local gov’ts had to be organized with relation to the Union • Political leaders of the North differed sharply over what should be done • Quarrels/infighting among Republican party
  • 6. Critical Thinking Questions 1. How did the role of the federal government change as a result of the Civil War and Reconstruction? 2. In what ways did the events of the Civil War and Reconstruction amount to a revolution? 3. What is the “New South” and who promoted it? 4. Some historians have called Reconstruction a “Glorious Failure”? How accurate is this description?
  • 7. Key Questions for the Union 1. How to 
 bring the South
 back into the 
 Union? 2. How to 
 rebuild the South
 after its
 destruction 
 during the war? 3. How to 
 integrate and
 protect newly-
 emancipated
 black freedmen? 4. What branch
 of government
 should control
 the process of
 Reconstruction?
  • 8. Stages of Reconstruction 1. Presidential Reconstruction (1863-1866) 2. Congressional (or Radical) Reconstruction (1867-1877) 3. Redemption (1877-1900) (creation of the “New South”)
  • 10. PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION 10% Plan *Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction (December 8, 1863) *Replace majority rule with “loyal rule” in the South. *He didn’t consult Congress regarding Reconstruction. *Pardon to all but the highest ranking military and civilian Confederate officers. *When 10% of the voting population in the 1860 election had taken an oath of loyalty and established a government, it would be recognized. Thaddeus Stevens Charles Sumner
  • 11. PRESIDENTIAL RECONSTRUCTION • Lincoln’s Assassination(April 14, 1865) • John Wilkes Booth Ford’s Theatre, April 1865 John Wilkes Booth (1862)
  • 12. Wade-Davis Bill (1864) ★Required 50% of the number of 1860 voters to take an “iron clad” oath of allegiance (swearing they had never voluntarily aided the rebellion ). ★Required a state constitutional convention before the election of state officials. ★Enacted specific safeguards of freedmen’s liberties. Senator
 Benjamin
 Wade
 (R-OH) Congressman
 Henry
 W. Davis
 (R-MD)
  • 13. 13th Amendment - Ratified in December, 1865. - Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place subject to their jurisdiction. - Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
  • 14. Freedmen’s Bureau (1865) ★ Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. ★ Many former northern abolitionists risked their lives to help southern freedmen. ★ Called “carpetbaggers” by white southern Democrats.
  • 15. Freedmen’s Bureau Seen Through 
 Southern Eyes Plenty to eat and nothing to do.
  • 16. President Andrew Johnson Jacksonian Democrat. Anti-Aristocrat. White Supremacist. Agreed with Lincoln
 that states had never
 legally left the Union. Damn the negroes! I am fighting these traitorous aristocrats, their masters!
  • 17. President Johnson’s Plan (10%+) - Offered amnesty upon simple oath to all except 
 Confederate civil and military officers and those with property over $20,000 (they could apply directly to Johnson) - In new constitutions, they must accept minimum
 conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts. - Named provisional governors in Confederate states and called them to oversee elections for constitutional conventions. EFFECTS? 1. Disenfranchised certain leading Confederates. 2. Pardoned planter aristocrats brought them back 
 to political power to control state organizations. 3. Republicans were outraged that planter elite 
 were back in power in the South!
  • 18. Radical Republican Motives •Dislike for Johnson, thought him unworthy •Fear of executive encroachment upon authority of Congress • Lincoln did expand executive branch to largest it had ever been •Desire by Radical Republicans to protect Freedmen •wanted to redistribute confiscated southern land to blacks and poor whites •resentment over return of former Confederates to political power
  • 19. - Congress bars Southern
 Congressional delegates. - Joint Committee on 
 Reconstruction created. - February, 1866 à President
 vetoed the Freedmen’s
 Bureau bill. - March, 1866 à Johnson
 vetoed the 1866 Civil Rights Act. - Congress passed both bills over 
 Johnson’s vetoes à 1st in 
 U. S. history Congress Ends Presidential Reconstruction
  • 20. Growing Northern Alarm! Many Southern state constitutions fell short of minimum requirements. Johnson granted 13,500 special pardons. Revival of southern defiance. BLACK CODES
  • 21. Black Codes Purpose: Guarantee stable labor 
 supply now that blacks 
 were emancipated. Restore pre-emancipation
 system of race relations.
 Forced many blacks to become sharecroppers [tenant farmers].
  • 22. Johnson the Martyr / Samson “If my blood is to be shed because I vindicate the Union and the preservation of this government in its original purity and character, let it be shed; let an altar to the Union be erected, and then, if it is necessary, take me and lay me upon it, and the blood that now warms and animates my existence shall be poured out as a fit libation to the Union.” 
 (February 1866)
  • 23. -Ratified in July, 1868. - Provide a constitutional guarantee of the rights and security of freed people. - Insure against neo-Confederate political power. - Enshrine the national debt while repudiating that of the Confederacy. -Southern states would be punished for denying the right to vote to black citizens!
  • 24. - Civil authorities in the territories were subject to military supervision. - Required new state constitutions, including
 black suffrage and ratification of the 13th and 14th Amendments. - In March, 1867, Congress passed an act that authorized the military to enroll eligible black voters and begin the process of constitution making.
  • 25. Radical Plan for Readmission What is the Radical Plan? Reconstruction Acts of 1867: • Constitutions and governments set up under the Johnson plan were thrown out • Military supervision of civil authorities • “Ironclad oath” • New state constitutions with black suffrage • Ratification of the Thirteenth & Fourteenth Amendments • Military supervision of voter registration (e.g. freedmen) and of constitution making.
  • 26. Reconstruction Acts of 1867 Military Reconstruction Act Restart Reconstruction in the 10 Southern states that refused to ratify the 14th Amendment. Divide the 10 “unreconstructed states” into 5 military 
 districts.
  • 27. Command of the Army Act The President must issue all Reconstruction orders through 
 the commander of the military. Tenure of Office Act The President could not remove 
 any officials [esp. Cabinet members] without the Senate’s consent, if the position originally required Senate approval. Designed to protect radical
 members of Lincoln’s government. A question of the 
 constitutionality of this law. Edwin Stanton
  • 28. Johnson removed Stanton in February, 1868. Johnson replaced generals in the field who were more sympathetic to Radical Reconstruction. The House impeached him on February 24 
 before even
 drawing up the
 charges by a 
 vote of 126 – 47
  • 29. The Senate Trial 11 week trial. Johnson acquitted 
 35 to 19 (one short of required 2/3s vote).
  • 30. Johnny Rebel - I'm A Good Old Rebel Lyrics (1914 Maj. James Randolph) Oh, I'm a good old rebel, Now thats just what I am, And for this yankee nation, I do no give a damn. I'm glad I fought a ganner, I only wish we won. I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done. I hates the yankee nation and everything they do. I hates the declaration of independence, too. I hates the glorious union, t'is dripping with our blood. I hates the striped banner, and fit it all I could I rode with Robert E. Lee, For three years, thereabout. Got wounded in four places, And I starved at point lookout. I catched the rheumatism A campin' in the snow. But I killed a chance of Yankees And I'd like to kill some more. 3 hundred thousand Yankees Is stiff in southern dust. We got 3 hundred thousand Before they conquered us They died of Southern Fever And southern steel and shot I wish there were 3 million Instead of what we got. I can't pick up my musket And fight 'um down no more But I ain't gonna love 'um Now that is certain sure And I don't want no pardon For what I was and am I won't be reconstructed And I do not give a damn Oh, I'm a good old rebel, Now that's just what I am, And for this yankee nation, I do no give a damn. I'm glad I fought a ganner, I only wish we won. I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done. I aint asked any pardon for anything I've done.
  • 32. Tenancy & the Crop Lien System Furnishing Merchant Tenant Farmer Landowner ▪Loan tools and seed up to 60% interest to tenant farmer to plant spring crop.
 ▪Farmer also secures 
 food, clothing, and
 other necessities on
 credit from merchant until the harvest.
 ▪Merchant holds “lien” {mortgage} on part of tenant’s future crops as repayment of debt. ▪Plants crop, harvests in autumn.
 ▪Turns over up to ½ of crop to land owner as payment of rent.
 ▪Tenant gives remainder of crop to merchant in
 payment of debt. ▪Rents land to tenant in exchange for ¼ 
 to ½ of tenant farmer’s future crop.
  • 33. Black & White Political Participation
  • 35. Core voters were black veterans. Blacks were politically unprepared. Blacks could register and vote in states since 1867. The 15th Amendment guaranteed
 federal voting.
  • 36. - Ratified in 1870. - The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. - The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. - Women’s rights groups were furious that they were not granted the vote
  • 37. The “Invisible Empire of the South”
  • 38. - Enforcement Acts of 1870 & 1871 [also known as the KKK Act]. - “The Lost Cause.” - The rise of the
 “Bourbons.” - Redeemers (prewar
 Democrats and Union Whigs).
  • 39. - Crime for any individual to deny full &
 equal use of public conveyances and
 public places. - Prohibited discrimination in jury 
 selection. - Shortcoming à lacked a strong
 enforcement mechanism. - No new civil rights act was attempted
 for 90 years!
  • 40. “Grantism” & corruption. Panic of 1873 [6-year depression]. Concern over westward
 expansion and Indian wars. Key monetary issues: should the government retire $432m worth of “greenbacks” issued during the Civil War. should war bonds be paid back in specie or greenbacks.
  • 41. Election of 1876 •Tilden v. Hayes (Rep) Tilden won popular vote and 184 of electoral. •Election went to a panel of 15 voters: 7 went to Tilden/7 to Hayes •Last vote undecided •Goes to congress where a deal is struck •Deal is.....Hayes wins election but Reconstruction troops in the South are removed. •Result is 100 years of segregation in the South How does this “deal” compare to the “corrupt bargain” of 1824?
  • 42. Compromise of 1877 •Deal to put Hayes into office with promise to end Reconstruction. •Was necessary as there was no clear majority winner despite Tilden owning a slight edge in popular vote. • How bad of a decision was this? What is worse - the compromises leading up to the Civil War regarding slavery or afterwards regarding Reconstruction?
  • 43. The Political Crisis of 1877 - “Corrupt Bargain”
 Part II?
  • 44. Civil Rights case of 1883 • Supreme Court declared Civil Rights Act of 1875 void (provided “the full and equal enjoyment” of public facilities) • Stepping stone towards segregation • Jim Crow: Segregation Laws in place until 1964 • Jim Crow Laws segregated blacks from whites in all public areas including: hospitals, bathrooms, buses, schools, and parks. • Plessy v. Ferguson 1896: Supreme Court rules that “separate but equal” is constitutional • Mississippi v. Williams: Supreme Court approval of Mississippi Plan (implementation of literacy tests prior to voting)
  • 45.
  • 46. Home Rule in the South •Redeemers: voided Reconstruction and gave new rules for the South. “Saved” the South from carpetbaggers. •Southern fear of Carpetbaggers/ anger towards Union results in South blocking Northern investors. •Using the Plessy v. Ferg ruling, the South formal takes back control in 1877
  • 47. New South • Agriculturally - Old large plantations divided up and used for sharecropping • Industrially - massive exploitation of Southern resources in an attempt to catch up to Northern industry. (expansion of RRs) • Politically - power base of Southern Democrats was the wealthy former confederates who wanted segregation and disenfranchisement • Living Standards - very poor population, especially blacks. Only wealthy elite enjoyed a comfortable lifestyle.
  • 48. Booker T. Washington • Atlanta Compromise: Booker T. Washington is OK with segregation and the abandonment of Reconstruction. • Washington believes that equality will come from economic growth in the black community instead of civil rights. • Close the racial gap with accommodation • Supported technical training for blacks and improving the labor force rather than focusing on civil rights agendas • Blacks needed to prove their worth to society first
  • 49. W.E.B. DuBois • post 1900 • Anti-Booker T. Washington - sought civil rights and higher education (college) • First African American to receive a doctorate from Harvard (1895) • Felt blacks should receive an advanced education so the black community would have well-educated leaders. • Civil Rights proponent who wanted immediate, legal changes. Established the NAACP (1909) and The Crisis newsletter. Also published The Souls of Black Folks