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Reconstruction - Dublin City Schools
Reconstruction - Dublin City Schools

... • However, during its brief time, it helped many slaves transition to freedom throughout the South. ...
CPUSH (Unit 6, #3) Name Date Pd ______ Reconstruction (1865
CPUSH (Unit 6, #3) Name Date Pd ______ Reconstruction (1865

... b. The _____________________ and _____________________ disagreed over how to treat the Southern states 2. Lincoln favored a plan that would _____________________ re-admit the Confederate states once ______% of the people swore an oath of loyalty and states ratified the ________ Amendment to ________ ...
Johnson`s Plan
Johnson`s Plan

... state agency - not federal believed the Civil Rights Act was unconstitutional angers more Repubs now ...
Burns USH (Unit 4, #5) Name Date Pd ______ Reconstruction
Burns USH (Unit 4, #5) Name Date Pd ______ Reconstruction

... b. The _____________________ and _____________________ disagreed over how to treat the Southern states 2. Lincoln favored a plan that would _____________________ re-admit the Confederate states once ______% of the people swore an oath of loyalty and states ratified the ________ Amendment to ________ ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... • Under Johnson’s plan, most Southern states ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, and it became law in December 1865. • However, Southern voters elected a number of former Confederate leaders and wealthy planters to Congress. Despite Johnson’s dislike for the wealthy, he was willing to be generous to ...
Study help for Unit 6 test Clicker questions with answers
Study help for Unit 6 test Clicker questions with answers

... the Emancipation Proclamation, it was important because: a. Union troops would free slaves as they took over Confederate territory b. Confederate states eventually freed their slaves c. It meant that Britain would help the Confederacy in the war d. Slaves rose up in a mass rebellion against their ow ...
ch17s1 - Team8-0
ch17s1 - Team8-0

... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865

... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
Reconstruction - Ms. Zizzo and Mr. Ardis` US History
Reconstruction - Ms. Zizzo and Mr. Ardis` US History

... •Freedmen were assumed to be agricultural workers and their duties and hours were tightly regulated. •Freedmen were not to be taught to read or write •.Public facilities were segregated. •Violators of these laws were subject to being whipped or branded. ...
Chapter 14 - TeacherWeb
Chapter 14 - TeacherWeb

... The Republicans took charge of Reconstruction, and Johnson could not stop them. This period is known as Radical Reconstruction. In March 1867, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act, which called for the creation of new governments in the 10 Southern states that had not ratified the Fourteenth Amend ...
unit VI-The Civil War Era
unit VI-The Civil War Era

... Lecompton constitution in Kansas Lincoln-Douglas debates Freedmen’s Bureau established Black Codes developed Repossession of land by whites and freedpeople’s contracts starts Freedmen’s Bureau renewed and Civil Rights Act passed over Johnson’s veto Southern Homestead Act Ku Klux Klan formed Tennesse ...
- Our Schools
- Our Schools

... War of Attrition – who can outlast? From May to June ...
File - Mr. Fisher`s Class
File - Mr. Fisher`s Class

... had to swear an oath of loyalty to the United States and accept the ban on slavery. When 10 percent of the voters in any state took the oath, that state could be accepted back into the Union. This was called the Ten Percent Plan. Some supported the Wade-Davis Bill instead. The procedure of the Wade- ...
4_9 Reconstruction Gallery FULL - St. Agnes Academic High School
4_9 Reconstruction Gallery FULL - St. Agnes Academic High School

... the Southern states were to be admitted back into the Union. A bitter power struggle followed between the President and Congress over which branch had the power to determine the conditions for admission. The Presidential Plan President Lincoln believed that in order to rebuild national unity, Southe ...
The Politics of Reconstruction
The Politics of Reconstruction

... Name _____________________________ Class _________________ Date __________________ ...
civil war: study guide for test
civil war: study guide for test

... war and how? How does the Civil War meet the three tests of what constitutes a civil war? 2.What was Lincoln’s first priority in conducting the war? How did this impact his position on slavery? What steps did Lincoln take to end slavery? 3.What factors made it difficult for Kentuckians to decide whi ...
Reconstruction: 1865-1877
Reconstruction: 1865-1877

... failure to make any provision for suffrage or equality before the law, or defining any role whatever for blacks in the Reconstruction process. *For Lincoln, the 10% plan was not a hard and fast policy from which he was determined to never deviate from; rather it was viewed as a measure to shorten th ...
Reconstruction and Republican Rule
Reconstruction and Republican Rule

... Main objective: stop black people from voting and exercising their newly won civil rights Members wore white robes with hoods to hide their faces Playing on the idea that African Americans were superstitious, Klan members sometimes claimed to be ghosts of dead Confederate ...
(CH 10-12) (1848
(CH 10-12) (1848

... The ______________ was a vigilante group was born during reconstruction, in the South, to intimidate ex-slaves. _________ __________ and ________ ________ were methods used in the South to resist racial equality by limiting suffrage for African Americans. _____________ _______________ was impeached ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL

... HEARING ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL

... HEARING ...
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL
CHAPTER 4: THE UNION IN PERIL

... HEARING ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, o ...
Reconstruction - Cloudfront.net
Reconstruction - Cloudfront.net

... •Alexander Stephens (VP of Confederacy) elected senator from GA •Black codes (see next slides) passed to establish white authority •Violence against blacks in South (KKK formed) ...
Collision of Cultures
Collision of Cultures

... D) 1866 Congressional elections centered largely on reconstruction issue. 1) Johnson asked Southern states to reject 14th Amendment as he campaigned for Democrats on his “swing around the circle" tour. (a) -- All Southern states except Tennessee rejected it putting it in temporary limbo. 2) Republic ...
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Radical Republican



The Radical Republicans were a faction of American politicians within the Republican Party from about 1854 (before the American Civil War) until the end of Reconstruction in 1877. They called themselves ""Radicals"" and were opposed during the war by the Moderate Republicans (led by Abraham Lincoln), by the Conservative Republicans, and by the pro-slavery Democratic Party. After the war, the Radicals were opposed by self-styled ""conservatives"" (in the South) and ""liberals"" (in the North). Radicals strongly opposed slavery during the war and after the war distrusted ex-Confederates, demanding harsh policies for the former rebels, and emphasizing civil rights and voting rights for freedmen (recently freed slaves).During the war, Radical Republicans often opposed Lincoln in terms of selection of generals (especially his choice of Democrat George B. McClellan for top command) and his efforts to bring states back into the Union. The Radicals passed their own reconstruction plan through Congress in 1864, but Lincoln vetoed it and was putting his own policies in effect when he was assassinated in 1865. Radicals pushed for the uncompensated abolition of slavery, while Lincoln wanted to pay slave owners who were loyal to the Union. After the war, the Radicals demanded civil rights for freedmen, such as measures ensuring suffrage. They initiated the Reconstruction Acts, and limited political and voting rights for ex-Confederates. They bitterly fought President Andrew Johnson; they weakened his powers and attempted to remove him from office through impeachment, which failed by one vote. The Radicals were vigorously opposed by the Democratic Party and often by moderate and Liberal Republicans as well.
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