Reconstruction Slideshow

Post on 29-Nov-2014

2.509 views 1 download

description

These are some of the slides viewed in class.

Transcript of Reconstruction Slideshow

Unit 1 Results of the Civil War

Slide 1

Slide 1

The Union is restored, but there is still much anger between northerners and southerners.

Slide 2

Slide 2

Slavery is ended,

but newly freed slaves have no homes or jobs.

Slide 3

Slide 3

And, African Americans face violence from angry white southerners.

Slide 4

Slide 4

Southern cities have been destroyed.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Slide 5

Slide 5

Southern railroads have been destroyed, as well as roads and bridges.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Slide 6

Slide 6

Southern plantations have been destroyed,

so the southern economy is ruined.

Slide 7

Slide 7

620,000 soldiers are dead.

Northern deaths = 360,000

Southern deaths = 260,000

Slide 8

Slide 8

Thousands of soldiers are wounded.

Slide 9

Slide 9

President Lincoln is assassinated (murdered) on April 14, 1865.

John Wilkes Booth

…the life-blood from those veins, the best and sweetest of the land, drips slowly down, and death’s ooze already begins its little bubbles on the lips.…

Vice-President Andrew Johnson is now President

-from the South

-a Democrat (most members of Congress are Republicans)

sharecropping-freedmen farmed white landowners’ land using supplies provided by the landownerin exchange for a share of the harvest

black codes

-laws passed by southern states designed to keep African Americans in a condition similar to slavery.

Political Conditions

Congress, northern Republicans want to punish white southerners and protect rights of former slaves

-former Confederate leaders getting elected to state governments and

Military Reconstruction

southern states had to ratify the 14th Amendment, African Americans had

- divided the South into five military districts commanded by army generals,

to be allowed to vote in all southern states

Civil War Amendments

14th -granted citizenship to all people born in the U.S.,

13th -banned slavery throughout the nation,

15th -no citizen may be denied the right to vote because of race

-provided food, clothing, jobs, medical care to freedmen and poor whites-set up schools for freedmen (300,000 attended) -teachers were volunteers, often women, from the North

Freedmen’s Bureau

Carpetbaggers:

Southerners who had been loyal to the US during the Civil War, or who

were helping Republicans.

Northerners who moved South to hold office or take advantage of economic opportunities in the

South.

Scalawags:

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

The White League and the KKK: - racist groups created to make conditions for freedmen unbearable. They used violence and fear to control freedmen.

Lynching:

-murder committed by a mob

The following photographs are graphic. You may look away.

Reconstruction’s End

-by 1877 northerners grew tired of trying to change the South and wanted to forget the war

-white southerners began voting again and denied African Americans the right to vote

Disenfranchisement: -denying someone the right to vote

literacy tests:

poll taxes:

grandfather clauses:

-voters had to pay a tax before they could vote

-voters had to prove they could read

-allowed poor/illiterate white southerners to vote

Jim Crow Laws-laws that created separate facilities for African Americans and whites (schools, restaurants, trains, hospitals, theaters, etc.)

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)-the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was legal as long asfacilities for African Americans and whites were equal, which they rarely were-“Separate but Equal”

-made Jim Crow legal

racism-the belief that one race is superior to another

prejudice-irrational suspicion or hatred of a particular group based on race, or religion

oppression-the act of controlling or denying a group rights due to prejudice

stereotype-an oversimplified generalization about a person or group

discrimination-unfair treatment of a person or group because of their race

segregation-separating people of different races in schools, housing, and public or private facilities

dehumanization-process by which members of one group remove human traits from members of another group, making them seem less than human

-can lead to violence, human rights violations, and genocide

genocide-mass murder or abuse of a group (race, religion, ethnicity, nationality, etc.)