Chapter 17 Section 2 Radicals in Control. Unrest Across the South Various reconstruction plans and...

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Black Codes

• By early 1866, many southern states had passed laws to control freed slaves.

Black Codes

• The laws allowed police to arrest jobless African Americans and banned African Americans from owning or renting land.

• Congress passed a new bill giving the Freedman’s Bureau new powers to fight the Black Codes

The Fourteenth Amendment• The 14th Amendment granted full

citizenship to all people born in the United States.

• The Radicals then made ratification of the amendment another requirement for southern states to be readmitted

States rejoining the Union• After taking oaths to the Union, many

white southerners refused to vote in elections for their new state governments.

States rejoining the Union

• However, newly registered African Americans did vote.

• African American overwhelmingly voted in Republican candidates giving the Radical Republicans control of the federal government as well as the state governments.

States rejoining the Union

• By 1870 all southern states had rejoined the Union.

President vs. Congress• The Radicals quickly moved to limit

the power of the President as much as possible.

Tenure of Office Act• Law passed by Congress stating that

the President cannot remove any government official without the authorization of Congress.

• Johnson blatantly defied the act by removing Secretary of War Edwin Stanton in August of 1867.

Impeachment• Outraged by Johnson’s actions,

Congress began impeachment hearings on the President.

• Congress came within one vote of getting the 2/3 majority needed to impeach the President.

Impeachment

• Johnson stayed in office until his term ended in March 1869.

New President• The Republicans nominated Ulysses

S. Grant to run for President.

• Grant was still extremely popular and won an easy victory.

15th Amendment

• Passed in 1869 it prohibited state governments and the federal government from denying the right to vote to any male citizen regardless of race.