Download - Sketching Out the End of Reconstruction

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Page 1: Sketching Out the End of Reconstruction

Sketching Out the End of Reconstruction

Enough is Enough

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Four Reasons For End of

Reconstruction1) General Amnesty Act of 18722) Grant’s Presidency3) Panic of 18734) Recall of troops in 1877

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General Amnesty Act of 1872

• South claims US isn’t a democracy because they cannot elect some Democrats - Valid Point

• Congress allows former CSA officials to hold public office

• Southern Democrats take hold of state positions

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Ulysses S. Grant’s Presidency

• President Grant’s (a Republican) cabinet is corrupt and scandals break out

• People move away from Republican party as a result

• Grant thought of as one of worst Presidents

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Panic of 1873• US economy goes into a severe recession (2 million unemployed of 36 million)

• People increasingly choose Democrats to try to fix the problems

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U.S. Troops Recalled

• Army that Congress sent to South to supervise Reconstruction were called back in 1877 by President Rutherford B. Hayes

• Effectively ends supervision in the South

• Southern Democrats (segregationists) are now in control

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When the Federal Government Left the South Alone, What

Happened?

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Blacks‘ dreams for justice ends at the close of

Reconstruction at the end of the 19th century

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WARNING:You are going to be mad at the next few

slides. Remember, it is not my fault - I just tell you about

it!

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Voting Restrictions

• Poll Tax - a fee to vote (stops poor from voting)

• Literacy Tests - Had to read a paragraph to vote (Blacks given harder passages)

• Grandfather Clause - You could avoid a poll tax or literacy test if your grandfather voted prior to 1867.

• Blacks were poor, uneducated, and had no grandfathers who voted.

• These laws stopped Blacks (Republicans) from voting, allowing Democrats to gain control

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Segregation• Jim Crow laws - Laws that forced separation of whites and Blacks

• Separating the races is called segregation

• Examples of Jim Crow laws– Separate areas in theaters, restaurants, and railcars

– Different schools for whites and Blacks

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Supreme Court on Segregation

• Several cases went to Supreme Court saying that segregation and Jim Crow laws were in violation of the 14th Amendment

• Court rules the 14th Amendment only pertains to government actions, so private people and businesses can segregate

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Plessy vs. Ferguson (1896)• Supreme Court hears case of Homer Plessy being

arrested for refusing to leave a “whites only” railcar

• Decision - Arrest is upheld. Furthermore, the Court states that segregation is legal as long as there are “Separate but Equal” facilities

• “Equal” means that both Blacks and whites have access to the object (example - black water fountain is rusty emitter of dirty water, white fountain is great = legal - they both have a water fountain

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Reconstruction Successes

• Southern economy rebuilt and more diverse (not just cotton anymore)

• Education in place for both whites and blacks

• Black colleges and universities created

• Blacks received temporary rights in government and society

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Reconstruction Failures

• Blacks lose rights at the end of the Reconstruction Era

• Sharecropping is the main job of blacks in the South (not much better than slavery)

• Governments in the South run by racist leaders and supported by courts

• Jim Crow South established - no future for blacks