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Reconstruction Plan
Reconstruction Plan

... authority to readmit the seceded states • Feared that the southern states would vote Democratic and then regain control of the Federal Government and Congress • Refused to approve the new states governments or seat their representatives in Congress • Radicals took charge of this Reconstruction plan ...
1 Standard 8.84 Lesson
1 Standard 8.84 Lesson

... • A new state government could be formed when 10 percent of its voters pledged its allegiance to the United States. States could then elect Congressmen and participate in the national government. • Southern states admitted by this plan would need a plan to abolish slavery and deal with the freed sla ...
Reconstruction - Bonneville High School
Reconstruction - Bonneville High School

... system of race relations. ...
RECONSTRUCTION The Union defeated the Confederate states in
RECONSTRUCTION The Union defeated the Confederate states in

... punishment for the southern states. Let the nation rebuild and move forward. Some politicians in Congress disagreed with this and thought the south should be punished for being disloyal to the United States. After President Lincoln was assassinated in April 1865, his Vice-President Andrew Johnson be ...
RECONSTRUCTION
RECONSTRUCTION

... punishment for the southern states. Let the nation rebuild and move forward. Some politicians in Congress disagreed with this and thought the south should be punished for being disloyal to the United States. After President Lincoln was assassinated in April 1865, his Vice-President Andrew Johnson be ...
File
File

... intimidation and violence to prevent African Americans from voting or holding positions of power.  Helped increase the environment of violence and hatred.  Mobs of Southern whites periodically lashed out against the newly freed citizens  Also terrorized carpetbaggers and scalawags. (Southerners w ...
Dating the Reconstruction era
Dating the Reconstruction era

... Reconstruction addressed how the eleven seceding states would regain what the Constitution calls a "republican form of government" and be reseated in Congress, the civil status of the former leaders of the Confederacy, and the Constitutional and legal status of freedmen, especially their civil right ...
File - Mr. Kawecki`s AP US History Class
File - Mr. Kawecki`s AP US History Class

... under the plan. (They were occupied) Might win support for party and loyal states in South Willing to put issue of freedmen aside for rapid reunification ...
Handout
Handout

... c. Scalawags d. Carpetbaggers e. Ku Klux Klan f. Rutherford B. Hayes ...
Goal 3 – Crisis, Civil War and Reconstruction
Goal 3 – Crisis, Civil War and Reconstruction

... c. Scalawags d. Carpetbaggers e. Ku Klux Klan f. Rutherford B. Hayes ...
What was Reconstruction? - Hewlett
What was Reconstruction? - Hewlett

... What was the congressional plan for Reconstruction? Congress voted to override Johnson’s vetoes. It also passed the Fourteenth Amendment. This amendment gave African Americans full citizenship. Johnson urged Southern states to oppose the amendment. He argued that the amendment was too hard on the So ...
Reconstruction Notes - Madison County Schools
Reconstruction Notes - Madison County Schools

... reinstate the Constitution of 1832, which recognized the right to own slavery. 2. MS refused to ratify the 13th Amendment. 3. State elections were held and many former Confederates were elected to public office. 4. MS’s new state legislature refuses to ratify the 14th Amendment, which granted the fr ...
lecture notes
lecture notes

... 3. How were defeated rebels to be dealt with? 4. How to assure black freedom? 5. What is the status of the freedman? Lincoln assassinated, April 1865 Was there a conspiracy or a coup d’etat? After the assassination, Northerners are more hostile to the South and so Radical Republicans see a chance to ...
Reconstruction Powerpoint File
Reconstruction Powerpoint File

... unemployed; illegal to own a gun, only allowed to rent in cities ...
Document
Document

... crimes against prisoners of war. • As soon as ten percent of those who had voted in 1860 took this oath of allegiance, a Confederate state could form a new state government. ...
Reconstruction - HAATAmericanLit
Reconstruction - HAATAmericanLit

... 14th Ammendments, that would grant blacks political rights and freedom ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... President Lincoln was never able to carry out his plan for reconstruction, which was referred to as the Ten Percent Plan. From the beginning of the Civil War and his first inaugural address, Lincoln was focused on returning all regions of the country peacefully to the Union. Under Lincoln’s Ten Perc ...
the agony of reconstruction - Loudoun County Public Schools
the agony of reconstruction - Loudoun County Public Schools

... the precedent of removing a president conviction & removal from office But…Johnson did promise to For violating the Tenure of Office Act when enforce Reconstruction for the he tried to fire Sec of War Edwin Stanton remainder of his term…& he did! ...
Chapter 10 - s3.amazonaws.com
Chapter 10 - s3.amazonaws.com

... Same day of pardon, Johnson issued another proclamation for North Carolina It became a model of how he wanted to restore the South to the Union ...
Reconstruction - Geary County Schools USD 475
Reconstruction - Geary County Schools USD 475

... Civil Rights of African Americans Make-up of new southern state governments ...
Reconstruction: The Second Civil War
Reconstruction: The Second Civil War

... Reconstruction came in three phases. Presidential Reconstruction, 1863-66 was controlled by Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, with the goal of quickly reuniting the country. It can be said to have begun with the Emancipation Proclamation. The programs proposed by Lincoln and subsequentl ...
File
File

... What made Reconstruction a challenge for Americans? ...
America`s History Seventh Edition
America`s History Seventh Edition

... [the foreman, the restrictions on marriage, fears of being sold away from family members]; inability of freedmen to afford their own land left their families at the constant mercy of the landlord and the strength of the cotton harvest.) 3. What does the presence of a white man in this image indicate ...
radical republicans
radical republicans

... for any freedman, free negro, or mulatto, to charge any white person, freedman, free negro or mulatto by affidavit, with any criminal offense against his or her person or property, and upon such affidavit the proper process shall be issued and executed as if said affidavit was made by a white person ...
Teaching Resources
Teaching Resources

... 7. The economy had fallen into a severe depression, which was triggered in 1873 by the bankruptcy of the Northern Pacific Railroad and its main investor, Jay Cooke; many economically pressed Americans believed that Republican financial manipulation had caused the depression. 8. Among the casualties ...
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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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