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Texas and the Civil War and Reconstruction

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Title: Texas and the Civil War and Reconstruction


1
Texas and the Civil WarandReconstruction
  • Civil War (1861-1865)
  • Reconstruction (1865-1874)

2
MAJOR ERAS IN TEXAS HISTORY
  • WHY HISTORIANS DIVIDE THE PAST INTO ERAS
  • Civil War (1861-1865)
  • Reconstruction (1865-1874)
  • Historians divide the past into eras so it is
    easier to identify cause and effect of the great
    events/people in history.

3
Civil War (1861-1865)
  • States Rights
  • Slavery
  • Confederate States of America
  • Last battle fought of the Civil War
  • Blockade

4
Reasons for Texas to Enter the Civil War
  • States Rights
  • Texans believed that states should be able to
    make their own political, economic, and social
    decisions.
  • Slavery
  • Texans believed that slavery was vital to the
    economy.

5
Reasons for Texas to Enter the Civil War
  • Sectionalism loyalty to the interests of one's
    own region or section of the country, rather than
    the nation as a whole
  • The Texas economy, social structure, customs, and
    political values was much like other southern
    states.

6
Reasons for Texas to Enter the Civil War
  • Tariff a tax on trade
  • Texans were for low tariffs to continue to trade
    cotton with European nations. Southern states
    produced 80 of the worlds supply of cotton.
  • The federal government imposed protective tariffs

7
Civil War in Texas
  • Political effects
  • Texas joined the Confederate States of America
  • Houston removed from office because he failed to
    sign an oath to the Confederacy
  • Conscription Act 60,000 Texans joined
    Confederate army
  • Some Texans sided with the Union and joined the
    Union forces

8
Civil War in Texas
  • Economic effects
  • Shortages of commodities, such as coffee,
    medicine, clothing, salt, paper
  • Trade along Mexican border continued and supplied
    some of these items to Texans
  • Cotton production declines and corn and wheat
    production increases
  • Shortage of free labor
  • Inadequate production in agriculture and business
  • Shortages were also due to the Union blockade
    along the Texas coast

9
Civil War in Texas
  • Social effects
  • Greater responsibilities for women and children
    during the war
  • Loss of family members
  • Union supporters were treated with hostility

10
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • John Bell Hood
  • Leader of the Confederacys Hoods Texas Brigade
  • Most notable battle Seven Days Campaign and
    fought at Gettysburg
  • Ft. Hood in Killeen is named for him
  • John Reagan
  • Served in the cabinet of Confederate President
    Jefferson Davis as Postmaster General

11
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Francis Lubbock
  • Governor of Texas in 1861
  • Assistant to Confederate President Jefferson
    Davis
  • John Magruder
  • Commanded Confederate forces in Texas
  • Recaptured Galvesto

12
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Thomas Green
  • Led the troops that were on the steamboats
    converted to gunboats by General John B.
    Magruder, who commanded the Confederate forces in
    Texas
  • Gunboats attacked Union ships in Galveston Bay
    and took back control of Galveston

13
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Lawrence Sullivan "Sul" Ross
  • Served as the 19th governor of Texas, a
    Confederate States Army general during the
    American Civil War, and a president of the
    Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, now
    called Texas AM University

14
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Battle of Galveston
  • July 1861 the Union Navy began to blockade
    Texas ports
  • October 1862 a Union fleet sailed into
    Galveston Harbor and Confederate forces
    retreated.
  • Confederate General John B. Magruder recaptured
    it by converting two steamboats into gunboats by
    lining their sides with cotton bales, earning the
    nickname Cotton Clads
  • January 1, 1863 General John B. Magruder and
    his men captured several hundred Union soldiers.
  • The city of Galveston was again under Confederate
    control

15
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Battle of Sabine Pass
  • 1863 The U.S. made plans to invade Texas.
  • Union General William B. Franklin and 5,000
    troops hoped to land his army near Sabine City,
    and then march overland to attack Houston and
    Beaumont
  • Ft. Griffin at Sabine Pass was guarded by
    Confederate Lieutenant Richard Dowling and Davis
    Guards
  • September 8, 1863, Union soldiers attacked, but
    the Davis Guards fought back, marking a complete
    victory for the Confederacy

16
Important People and Events of the Civil War
  • Battle of Palmito Ranch
  • Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered on
    April 9, 1865, but Confederate forces did not
    stop fighting for another month because word
    spread slowly.
  • May 12, 1865 the Union army moved inland to
    occupy Brownsville.
  • They collided with Confederate troops led by John
    S. Ford, who captured over 100 Union troops, and
    battled with them
  • Union troops informed the Confederate troops that
    the war was over.

17
Reconstruction (1865-1874)
  • 13th Amendment ended slavery
  • 14th Amendment citizenship given to African
    Americans
  • 15th Amendment suffrage given to all males
  • Radical Republicans
  • Military Districts
  • Removal of Native Americans on the frontier
  • Cattle Industry booms
  • Constitution of 1876

18
Reconstruction (1865-1874)
  • Political effects
  • Martial law the military polices the state
    under Governor Edwards
  • Constitution of 1876 written at the end of
    Reconstruction this is the constitution Texas
    still follows today
  • Indian wars the government removes Native
    Americans from the frontier.
  • Passage of the Reconstruction Amendments
  • 13th Amendment ended slavery
  • 14th Amendment citizenship given to African
    Americans
  • 15th Amendment suffrage given to all males

19
Reconstruction (1865-1874)
  • Economic effects
  • Growth of tenant farming and sharecropping
  • Expansion of railroad
  • Cattle industry booms

20
Reconstruction (1865-1874)
  • Social effects
  • Concern over future of freedmen
  • Juneteenth June 19, 1865 Emancipation Day in
    Texas (African-Americans learn they are free)
  • Freedmens Bureau established
  • Black Codes (state laws that limited rights of
    African Americans
  • Ku Klux Klan (terrorized African American voters
    and kept them away from the polls)

21
Effects of Physical and Human factors on Texas
  • End of the Civil War in Texas and freeing of
    Texas slaves
  • Communication during the 19th century was very
    slow. The war ended April 9, 1865. 
  • Confederate soldiers were still fighting May 12 -
    May 13, 1865 in Texas because they had not heard
    that Robert E. Lee surrendered and the war was
    over
  • Texas slaves did not hear about their
    emancipation until June 19, 1865
  • Texas is not devastated after the war because few
    battles were fought in Texas in comparison to the
    rest of the southern states.
  • Crops were still planted/sold through Mexico and
    circumvented the Union blockades

22
Texas Timeline
  • Texas in the Civil War and Reconstruction
  • 1861 Sam Houston resigns as governor of Texas
  • 1861 Texas secedes
  • 1865 The Civil War ends and Abraham Lincoln is
    assassinated
  • June 19, 1865 Texas slaves find out they are
    free from General Gordon Granger in Galveston
  • 1870 Texas is readmitted to the United States
  • 1874 Reconstruction ends in Texas

23
Texas Timeline
  • Texas in the Civil War and Reconstruction
  • 1876 the Constitution of 1876 is adopted. (This
    is the constitution used in Texas today.)
  • 1861 Civil War begins (Texas joins the
    Confederate States of America, seceding from the
    U.S.)
  • 1876 adoption of current state constitution
    (Texans did not want a strong central government
    and opted to rewrite the constitution and include
    limitation of the governors powers and voting
    rights to African Americans)
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