Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

27

Click here to load reader

Transcript of Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Page 1: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South

(1865-1896)

Section 4 Change in the South

Page 2: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Which of the following is most important to gaining freedom and equality?

A. Education

B. Money

C. The right to vote

D. The right to run for government office

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Page 3: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

How did the South change politically, economically, and socially when Reconstruction ended?

Page 4: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Grant’s Administration• During Grant’ administration,

Northerners began losing interest in Reconstruction

• It was time for the South to solve its own problems

• Radical leaders began to disappear from politics (Thaddeus Stevens died)

• Southerners felt they knew how to deal with African Americans

• Southerners protested what they called the “bayonet rule”

• The use of federal troops to support Reconstruction governments

Page 5: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Republican Revolt• 1870s- Rumors of

corruption in Grant’s administration and in Reconstruction governments spread

• Some Republicans split the party over the issue of corruption

• Another broke away over Reconstruction

• Called themselves the Liberal Republicans

• Nominated Horace Greeley to run against Grant in 1872

• Grant was reelected

Page 6: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Amnesty ActAmnesty Act• Pardoned most former

Confederates• Full rights were granted

including voting• Most were in the

Democratic party• Democrats soon gained

control of state governments in the South

• The KKK helped the Democrats take power by terrorizing Republican voters

Page 7: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Republican Problems• 1873- A series of political

scandals came to light• One scandal was with the

vice president• These scandals damaged

the Grant administration and the Republicans

• Grant and the nation also endured a severe economic depression

• Started with the Panic of 1873 when a series of bad railroad investments forced the powerful banking firm of Jay Cooke and Company to declare bankruptcy

Page 8: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Panic of 1873• Forced small banks to close

and the stock market to plummet

• 1000s of businesses shut down

• Tens of 1000s of Americans were out of work

• Blame for the hard times fell on the Republicans

• Congressional election of 1874- Democrats gained seats in the Senate and House of Representatives

• This weakened Congress’ commitment to Reconstruction

• And on protecting African American Rights

Page 9: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Election of 1876• The Republicans wanted

someone besides Grant• Republicans wanted to

win back Liberal Republicans and unite the party

• The Republicans nominated Rutherford B. Rutherford B. HayesHayes, governor of Ohio

• Hayes was honest and had moderate views of Reconstruction

• Democrats nominated Samuel Tilden, governor of New York

• Tilden gained fame by fighting corruption in New York City

Page 10: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Election of 1876 Continued• Tilden looked like the

winner (250,000 more votes)

• 4 states had disputed results and kept the outcomeoutcome in doubt

• Tilden had 184 electoral votes.

• 1 short of winning• Hayes needed all 20 of

the disputed votes to win• A commission was set up

to decide and they voted 8 to 7 to award all 20 votes to Hayes

Page 11: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Compromise of 1877• Democrats in Congress

threatened to fight the decision• Republicans and Southern

Democrats reportedly met in secret to work out an agreement

• March 2, 1877- Hayes was declared the winner

• The Compromise of 1877-Compromise of 1877- The new government would give more aid to the South

• Republicans would withdraw all remaining troops from Southern states

• The Democrats promised to maintain African American rights

Page 12: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

A New Policy• In his Inaugural Address,

Hayes declared that what the South needed most was…

• The restoration of “wise, honest, and peaceful local self-government”

• Hayes decided to let the Southerners handle racial issues

• The federal government would no longer attempt to reshape Southern society

• Reconstruction was over

Page 13: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Democrats in Control• Large landowning

Democrats took power• But also merchants,

bankers and other business leaders who supported economic development

• They called themselves “Redeemers”

• They redeemed the South from Republican rule

• They adopted conservative policies (lower taxes and reduced government spending)

• They cut services from Reconstruction (Including public education)

• These policies dominated Southern politics into the 1900s

Page 14: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Rise of the New South• Southerners looked to

develop a strong industrial economy

• This “New South” would have industries based on the region’s abundant coal, iron, tobacco, cotton, and lumber

• Textile and iron mills sprang up across the South

• Industry grew because there was a cheap and reliable workforce

• Factory workers put in long hours for low wages

• The railroad system was rebuilt and doubled in 10 years (1880 to 1890)

• Agriculture remained the South’s main economic activity

Page 15: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Rural Economy• Supporters of the New

South wanted to have the small farms raise a variety of crops rather than cotton

• But most went to unprofitable sharecropping

• Debt caused problems for poor farmers

• To repay debts, farmers grew cash crops

• Main crop was cotton• Too much cotton was

produced and prices fell

Page 16: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

A Divided Society• Dreams of justice faded for African

Americans when Reconstruction faded

• The 15th Amendment prohibited states from denying the right to vote because of race

• Southerners found a way to get around this Amendment

• Southerners required a poll taxpoll tax (many African Americans and poor whites couldn’t vote)

• Another approach was to make prospective voters take a literacy literacy testtest (Had to read difficult parts of the Constitution)

• Literacy tests also kept some whites from voting so some states passed grandfather clausesgrandfather clauses

• If your father or grandfather voted it gave you the right to vote

• These laws and threat of violence caused African American voting to decline drastically

Page 17: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Jim Crow Laws• By 1890s segregationsegregation

was a common feature of the South

• The South passed Jim Crow laws that required African Americans and whites to be separated in almost every public place

• 1896- Plessy v. Ferguson- Segregation was legal as long as it was equal

• “Separate but equal”• The facilities were in no

way equal• White violence rose

including lynchinglynching

Page 18: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Reconstruction’s Impact• Reconstruction was a

success and a failure• It helped the South rebuild

its economy• But most of the South

remained agricultural and poor

• African Americans gained greater equality, created their own institutions, and shared in governments with whites

• Their advancements did not last

• Civil rights leader W.E.B. Du Bois said “The slave went free, stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again toward slavery”

Page 19: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

How did the South change politically, economically, and socially when Reconstruction ended?

-Politically: power shifted to Democrats, who instituted conservative policies

-Economically- developed more industries, agriculture included sharecropping and tenant farming as well as large plantations

-Socially- laws created segregation and limited African American voting rights, white violence against African Americans increased

Page 20: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Chapter 17 Section 4 Quiz

• THE LAST ONE!

Page 21: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Most former Confederates were pardoned by the

Confederate A

ct.

Amnesty A

ct.

Fifteenth

Amendment.

Fourte

enth A

mendment.

25% 25%25%25%A. Confederate Act.

B. Amnesty Act.

C. Fifteenth Amendment.

D. Fourteenth Amendment.

Page 22: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Reconstruction ended with the

Amnesty A

ct.

Compromise

of 1877.

Civil Rights

Act of 1

875.

Fifteenth

Amendment.

25% 25%25%25%A. Amnesty Act.

B. Compromise of 1877.

C. Civil Rights Act of 1875.

D. Fifteenth Amendment.

Page 23: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Farmers thought that the quickest way to repay debt was to grow

suga

rcane.

cash

crops.

tobacc

o. co

rn.

25% 25%25%25%A. sugarcane.

B. cash crops.

C. tobacco.

D. corn.

Page 24: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

As a means of keeping poor people and African Americans from voting, many

Southern states required

a crop ta

x.

Jim Cro

w laws.

Reconstr

uction la

ws.

a poll tax.

25% 25%25%25%A. a crop tax.

B. Jim Crow laws.

C. Reconstruction laws.

D. a poll tax.

Page 25: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

What type of society did Southern states form by passing the Jim Crow laws?

an inte

grate

d socie

ty

a healthy s

ociety

a segre

gate

d socie

ty

an economic

socie

ty

25% 25%25%25%A. an integrated society

B. a healthy society

C. a segregated society

D. an economic society

Page 26: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Participant Scores

0 Participant 1

0 Participant 2

0 Participant 3

0 Participant 4

0 Participant 5

Page 27: Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865-1896) Section 4 Change in the South.

Team Scores

0 Team 1

0 Team 2

0 Team 3

0 Team 4

0 Team 5