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Warm-Up Question - Greenwood School District 50
Warm-Up Question - Greenwood School District 50

... Democratic Party to state gov’ts: – The KKK & black codes became successful in limiting black voting – Federal troops & military districts had difficulty protecting blacks – One-by-one, Southern state gov’ts shifted from Republican control to the Democratic Party – These “Redeemer Democrats” hoped t ...
Chapter 17 - AP US - 2014 - Phoenixville Area School District
Chapter 17 - AP US - 2014 - Phoenixville Area School District

... In return, President Hayes must end Reconstruction and pull the Union troops out of the South. Once this happens, there is no protection for the Freedmen and the South will regain their states and go back to the way it was. ...
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File

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reconstruction ppt 2014

... The Civil War Amds are also known as; Black Amds or Civil War Amds African-Americans experienced 12 years (1865-1877) of equality before losing their Civil and Political Rights. ...
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Ch 6 Lesson 2 Notes

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4 - Barren County Schools

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© Erin Kathryn 2015
© Erin Kathryn 2015

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... supported policies favorable to poor southern whites as well as blacks. Besides putting the South under the rule of federal soldiers, the Military Reconstruction Act of 1867 required that all the reconstructed southern states must a. give blacks the vote as a condition of readmission to the Union. ...
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Unit 4 spring 2009x

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Reconstruction Era Notes - Cherokee County Schools

... Southerners continued to rebel against the changes of Reconstruction. ► They found ways to keep African Americans from their rights by running for political office and writing new state laws such as the Black Codes. ► Many joined hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan. The goal of the KKK was to resto ...
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Redeemers



In United States history, the Redeemers were a white political coalition in the Southern United States during the Reconstruction era that followed the Civil War. Redeemers were the southern wing of the Bourbon Democrats, the conservative, pro-business faction in the Democratic Party, who pursued a policy of Redemption, seeking to oust the Radical Republican coalition of freedmen, ""carpetbaggers"", and ""scalawags"". They generally were led by the rich landowners, businessmen and professionals, and dominated Southern politics in most areas from the 1870s to 1910.During Reconstruction, the South was under occupation by federal forces and Southern state governments were dominated by Republicans. Republicans nationally pressed for the granting of political rights to the newly freed slaves as the key to their becoming full citizens. The Thirteenth Amendment (banning slavery), Fourteenth Amendment (guaranteeing the civil rights of former slaves and ensuring equal protection of the laws), and Fifteenth Amendment (prohibiting the denial of the right to vote on grounds of race, color, or previous condition of servitude) enshrined such political rights in the Constitution.Numerous educated blacks moved to the South to work for Reconstruction, and some blacks attained positions of political power under these conditions. However, the Reconstruction governments were unpopular with many white Southerners, who were not willing to accept defeat and continued to try to prevent black political activity by any means. While the elite planter class often supported insurgencies, violence against freedmen and other Republicans was often carried out by other whites; insurgency took the form of the secret Ku Klux Klan in the first years after the war.In the 1870s, secret paramilitary organizations, such as the White League in Louisiana and Red Shirts in Mississippi and North Carolina undermined the opposition. These paramilitary bands used violence and threats to undermine the Republican vote. By the presidential election of 1876, only three Southern states – Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida – were ""unredeemed"", or not yet taken over by white Democrats. The disputed Presidential election between Rutherford B. Hayes (the Republican governor of Ohio) and Samuel J. Tilden (the Democratic governor of New York) was allegedly resolved by the Compromise of 1877, also known as the Corrupt Bargain. In this compromise, it was claimed, Hayes became President in exchange for numerous favors to the South, one of which was the removal of Federal troops from the remaining ""unredeemed"" Southern states; this was however a policy Hayes had endorsed during his campaign. With the removal of these forces, Reconstruction came to an end.
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