Title: Reconstruction (1865-1876)
1Reconstruction (1865-1876)
Ms. Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley HS Chappaqua,
NY
2Chapter 13.3 Question Answers
31. Why did planters have difficulty finding
people to work for them?
- Nobody seemed to want to do the former work of
slaves, which was very difficult and paid poorly.
42. Why did sharecroppers rejoice at the chance to
become tenant farmers?
- Instead of working for a planter and a meager
share of the crop, tenant farmers rented their
own land, worked for themselves and kept all the
profits.
5Sharecropping
6Tenancy the Crop Lien System
Furnishing Merchant Tenant Farmer Landowner
Loan tools and seed up to 60 interest to tenant farmer to plant spring crop. Farmer also secures food, clothing, andother necessities oncredit from merchant until the harvest. Merchant holds lien mortgage on part of tenants future crops as repayment of debt. Plants crop, harvests in autumn. Turns over up to ½ of crop to land owner as payment of rent. Tenant gives remainder of crop to merchant inpayment of debt. Rents land to tenant in exchange for ¼ to ½ of tenant farmers future crop.
73. How did the South experience some success by
modeling itself after the North?
- Cities grew as a resul of increasted
industrilization
84. Did Reconstruction transform the South into
an industrialized, urban region like the North?
Explain.
- No, farming remained the backbone of the southern
economy. Much of the indoctrination remained
linked to agriculture or consisted of less
profitable stages of manufacturing
95. How did some southern states use
Reconstruction funds in beneficial ways?
- Expanded services, such as public schools to
their citizens and rebuilt infrastructure (the
public property and services that a society uses)
106. How did some Reconstruction funds serve
harmful or corrupt purposes?
- Legislatures levied heavy taxes on individuals to
pay for the new spending and much of this money
was lost to widespread corruption.
11Key terms
- Sharecropping farming a portion of someone
elses land in return for a share of the crop - Tenant farming paying rent for a piece of land
that can be planted with whatever crop the tenant
farmer works
12The Invisible Empire of the South
13The Failure of Federal Enforcement
- Enforcement Acts of 1870 1871 also known as
the KKK Act.
- These acts banned the use of terror, force, or
bribery to prevent people from voting b/c of
their race - Other laws banned the KKK entirely and
strengthened military protection of voters and
voting places
14The Civil Rights Act of 1875
- Crime for any individual to deny full equal use
of public conveyances andpublic places. - Prohibited discrimination in jury selection.
- Shortcoming ? lacked a strong
enforcement mechanism. - No new civil rights act was attemptedfor 90
years!
15Civil Rights Video Clip
16The Abandonment of Reconstruction
17Northern Support Wanes
- Grantism corruption.
- Panic of 1873 6-yeardepression.
- Concern over westwardexpansion and Indian wars.
- Key monetary issues
- should the government retire 432m worth of
greenbacks issued during the Civil War. - should war bonds be paid back in specie
orgreenbacks.
181876 Presidential Tickets
19Election 1876 disputed
- Republican Rutherford B. Hayes lost the popular
vote to Democrat Samuel Tilden (support from
solid south) - Electoral vote was disputed
- Areas of Florida, Louisiana South Carolina
(still under Republican and federal control) - Democrats submitted results that Democrat Tilden
had won these states the presidency
201876 Presidential Election
21A Political Crisis The Compromise of 1877
22What happens to decide dispute?
- Congress sets up a special commission to resolve
the election crisis (more Republicans than
Democrats) - Compromise of 1877
- Democrats agreed to give Hayes the victory in the
presidential election in return the new President
agreed to remove the remaining federal troops
from southern states - Give huge subsides to southern railroads
23Result from Compromise 1877
- Reconstruction ended without troops in the south
Freedmen had no allies - Opened the way for Democrats to regain control of
southern politics
24Video clip Compromise of 1877
25Success of Reconstruction
- Union is restored and rebuilding of South begun
- Southern economic growth is stimulated new
wealth in the north - African American gain formal rights of
citizenship equal treatment (14 15
amendments) - Many black families helped in obtaining housing,
jobs, and schools
26Failures of Reconstruction
- African Americans still lack property and
economic opporturnity - Southern government deny African Americans the
right to vote - Racists attitudes countinue, in both the North
and South. - Lasting bitterness between many Southerners
federal govt