Reconstruction in the South (US History)

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A brief introduction to Reconstruction in the South after the Civil War

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Reconstruction

in the South

USHC 3.4

Summarize the end of Reconstruction, including the role of anti–African American factions and competing national interests in undermining support for Reconstruction; the impact of the removal of federal protection for freedmen; and the impact of Jim Crow laws and voter restrictions on African American rights in the post-Reconstruction era.

Carpetbag

“Carpetbaggers”Nickname applied

by Southern whites to people who migrated South after the Civil War

The “Carpetbagger

Stereotype

Click to play!

The Motives

of the CarpetbaggersPower

Opportunity

Wealth

Service

Educating Freedmen and Women

Although many carpetbaggers went South to seek fortune and political office, many went South to educate freedmen and women.

Hampton Institute (VA)

Late Nineteenth Century

The Republican Coalitionin the South

“Carpetbaggers”

“Scalawags” Freedm

en

Resistance

to Reconstructi

on

The (First) Ku Klux Klan

Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, CSA Vigilantism

1865-1874

The Second Ku Klux Klan

The Two Klans “Kompared”The First Ku Klux

Klan

The Second Ku Klux

KlanTime Period

Reconstruction

1920s

Regional Prevalence

SouthMidwest,

South

Purpose Oppose carpetbagger governments

Oppose immigration, Catholicism,

black migration

Methods Intimidation & Violence

Birth of a Nation• Highest grossing

silent film EVER

• Glamorized the KKK–Responsible for

rise of Second KKK?

(1915)

From Birth of a Nation

POTUS

Birth of a Nation(1915)

CLIP ONE

NOTE: The inclusion of this video footage is for educational purposes and is not intended to endorse the views and perspectives contained therein.

1872 Presidential Election• Republican Split– Radicals vs.

Moderates

• Horace Greeley– Liberal Republican

party• Opposed Radical

Reconstruction and government corruption• Democrats Back

Greeley

You Win. You Die.

1872 Presidential Election

1872

1868

1876

Birth of a Nation(1915)

CLIP TWO

NOTE: The inclusion of this video footage is for educational purposes and is not intended to endorse the views and perspectives contained therein.

Restoration of Southern “Home Rule”1869-1877

1869

1874

1871

1877

1877

1877

1874187

3

1870

1869

1876

1874Northern public

opinion turns against Radical

Reconstruction.

Perception of “Colored Rule” and corruption in the

South under Carpetbag state

governmentshttp://blackhistory.harpweek.com/7illustrations/reconstruction/coloredrule.htm

1874 Congressional Elections

U.S. House of Representatives

1872 18740

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Repub-licans

VOTERS REACT TO:

• Bad Economy• Political

Corruption• Reconstruction

Policy

Birth of a Nation(1915)

CLIP THREE

NOTE: The inclusion of this video footage is for educational purposes and is not intended to endorse the views and perspectives contained therein.

Republican

Platform

Tilden: 184Hayes: 166Disputed: 19FTW: 185

1872

1868

1876

Democratic

Platform

1876 Presidential Election

http://elections.harpweek.com/controversy.htm

Compromise of 1877

DISPUTED ELECTION

Samuel Tilden(D-NY)

Rutherford B. Hayes

(R-OH)“Rutherfra

ud”

184 166

185

The “New

South”

“Redeemer” Governments

Southern White “Bourbon” Democrats re-assert authority

“Solid South”– DEMOCRATIC

STRONGHOLD• Republican Party a non-

entity in Southern politics until the 1960s

Gov. Wade Hampton (SC)

The Textile IndustryMoves South

CHEAP LABOR

But the South was still

primarily agricultural.Photo by Martin LaBar

Jim Crow

Photo by stonebird

Segregation

Photo by Universal Pops

VOTING RESTRICTIONS

New York Historical Society

Literacy Tests

Photo by ladytimeless

Poll Tax

Grandfather Clause

 Photo by Rene Bastiaanssen

 Photo by Rene Bastiaanssen

If this guy could

vote...

Photo by allesok

The Supreme Courtand Civil Rights

(Late Nineteenth Century)

In the late 19th century, the Supreme Court upheld Jim Crow, as well as

restrictions on voting. (Restrictions were not explicitly based on race.)

Photo by Joe Gratz

Plessy v. Ferguson

Segregation

Challenged

(1896)

Photo by stef_dit_patoc

Plessy v. Ferguson

SEPARATE BUT EQUAL

(1896)

Photo by fd

The Reality

1904 political cartoon by John T. McCutcheon

OVERTURNED

Brown v. Board (1954)

Photo by &y

“One hundred years later, we must face the tragic fact that the Negro is still not free.”

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