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Reconstruction

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Reconstruction Fifth Grade Reconstruction Re- to do again Construct- build Reconstruction- to build again What is being reconstructed ? Our country was badly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconstruction


1
Reconstruction
  • Fifth Grade

2
Reconstruction
  • Re- to do again
  • Construct- build
  • Reconstruction- to build again
  • What is being reconstructed?
  • Our country was badly damaged by the Civil
    Waremotionally and physically.
  • Emotionally-there were lots of bad feelings
    between the Northern and Southern states
  • Physically-homes, farms, hospitals were
    destroyedparticularly the South

3
  • Reconstruction of a Nation
  • Reconstruction after the Civil War was the
    process of reorganizing the southern states into
    the Union. Throughout the South, livestock had
    been killed, as plantations and industries were
    destroyed. Productivity levels slowed down, and
    Southern productivity had depended on slave
    labor, which no longer existed.
  • Without slaves after the war southern landholders
    reduced the size of their plantations.
    Landowners had to sell large portions of land.
    The concept of sharecropping began in the South.
    A tenant or sharecropper agreed to give the
    landowner, as rent, a portion of the crop raised
    from his labor. Sharecropping kept newly freed
    slaves in debt to landowners.

4
  • Reconstruction time period was from 1865-1877.
  • President Lincolns goal was to unite southern
    states with the Union. The grand plan was to
    have a united nation.

5
AIMS of Reconstruction
Abraham Lincoln
Preserve the Union and end Civil War quickly 13th
Amendment
Andrew Johnson
Humilate the Southern elite Wealthy Southerners
had to ask for a Presidential Pardon
  • African Americans

Reunite families, Build churches Equal rights
land, education, voting
United States Congress
Fix all the problems 13, 14, 15
amendments Freedmens Bureau
Southerners
Return to a normal way of life Wanted to continue
to be treated better than blacks Black Codes
written to punish blacks
6
  • The Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth
    Amendments to the Constitution freed the slaves,
    gave them citizenship and guaranteed the right to
    vote regardless of race.
  • The actions of the Freedmans Bureau were to
    eliminate injustices to blacks and poor whites.

7
13th Amendment
  • Freed the slaves everywhere in the United States.

President Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation was
the start of this, but it didnt free ALL slaves.
8
14th Amendment
  • Guaranteed citizenship to all African Americans

9
15th Amendment
  • Declared that all male citizens could vote and
    would not be denied because of race, creed, or
    previous condition of servitude.

10
Tableau Time
  • Divide into 6 groups
  • Reconstruction
  • 13th Amendment
  • Black codes
  • Freedmens Bureau
  • 14th Amendment
  • 15th Amendment
  • Create a tableau.
  • Write a script to explain.

11
KKK
  • The Ku Klux Klan was originally a social
    organization of ex-Confederate soldiers.
  • It grew into a terrorist group
  • The KKK used violence, intimidation and voter
    fraud to keep African Americans from exercising
    their rights under the 13th, 14th, and 15th
    amendments.
  • The Goodings

12
The Compromise of 1877
  • Democrats agreed to support the election of the
    Republican candidate of 1876 (the election was
    riddled with fraud due to KKK and other voter
    fraud) in exchange for the removal of all federal
    troops from the South.
  • Back to last slide

13
Discrimination Groups and Laws
  • Ku Klux Klan
  • The Compromise of 1877
  • Jim Crow Laws
  • Plessy v Ferguson 1896
  • Discrimination in the North vs. South

Supreme Court Justices that ruled on Plessy v
Ferguson
14
Jim Crow Laws
  • The name Jim Crow was ironically, a white mans
    imitation of a dancing and singing black
    stableman. As a result, the white performers gave
    the name to a system of segregation in the South.
    The Supreme Court ruled in 1896 in Plessey v.
    Ferguson that separate facilities for whites and
    blacks was constitutional. This form of
    discrimination took out the gains made by blacks
    during this time.

15
Jim Crow Laws
  • Jim Crow Laws were laws that promoted segregation
    in the South between the end of the
    Reconstruction period and the beginning of the
    Civil Rights movement.
  • segregationseparation
  • Return to discrimination groups and laws

16
Review Questions
  • How were African Americans lives changed by
    black codes after the Civil War?
  • They were forced to move to Canada.
  • They had to sign pledges to obey federal laws.
  • They were denied many rights.
  • The codes has no effect.

17
Review Questions
  • 2. Why was the Freedmens Bureau established?
  • To help former slaves after the war.
  • To punish the former Confederate states.
  • To help African Americans settle in Europe.
  • To elect Civil War generals to the Senate.

18
Review Questions
  • 3. Why were many in Congress offended by
    President Johnsons position on Reconstruction?
  • They opposed the work of the Freedmens Bureau.
  • President Johnson favored equal voting rights for
    women.
  • They supported the efforts of the Ku Klux Klan in
    the South.
  • South states could still limit the rights of
    African Americans.

19
Effects on African Americans
  • Rights Reasons Freedmens
  • Restrictions to Relocate Bureau

Jim Crow Laws 40 acres Land/ Sharecropping Freedom
Black Codes Vote Grandfather Clause Reading
test Poll Taxes
Reunite with families Establish
communities Churches Schools businesses
Food Clothing Medical care Education Protection Fi
nd jobs Land
20
Jump Start 1
  • What was one of the major differences between a
    sharecropper and a slave?
  • There was no difference.
  • Sharecroppers were very wealthy.
  • Sharecroppers were paid in shares for the work
    they did on the farm.
  • Sharecroppers were paid in gold.

21
Jump Start 2
  • What enforced the separation of African Americans
    and other races in the South?
  • Reconstruction laws
  • Jim Crow laws
  • Congress
  • Freedmans Bureau

22
Jump Start 3
  • Why did Congress disagree with President
    Johnsons plan for Reconstruction?
  • They did not want to include all of the southern
    states.
  • They did not want slavery to end.
  • It punished the South.
  • They thought it was too easy on the South.

23
Economic Social Effects of Reconstruction
Landowners
Poor Whites
Northerners
Freedmen
24
True or False
  1. The Emancipation Proclamation freed all
    slaves.
  2. The Southerners aim for Reconstruction
    was to end the war, but to keep the slaves.
  3. Jefferson Davis became president after
    Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.
  4. President Lincoln wanted to unify the
    country as quickly as possible.
  5. The 15th Amendment gave African
    Americans, men and women, the right to vote.

25
The Black Codes I Am Poem
  • I am (two special characteristics)
  • I wonder (something you are actually curious
    about)
  • I hear (an imaginary sound)
  • I see (an imaginary sight)
  • I want (an actual desire)
  • I am (the first line of the poem restated)
  • I pretend (something you pretend to do)
  • I feel (a feeling about something imaginary)
  • I touch (an imaginary touch)
  • I worry (something that really bothers you)
  • I cry (something that makes you very sad)
  • I am (the first line of the poem repeated)
  • I understand (something you know is true)
  • I say (something you believe in)
  • I dream (something you actually dream about)
  • I try (something you make an effort to do)
  • I hope (something you actually hope for)
  • I am (the first line of the poem repeated)

26
The Black Codes I Am Poem
  • I am a strong FREED African American.
  • I wonder if this freedom is really free.
  • I hear the voices of other freed slaves, heading
    for their new homes.
  • I see a Freedmens Bureau up ahead.
  • I want to start my new life on a farm of my
    own.
  • I am a strong FREED African American.
  • I pretend that Im not afraid.
  • I feel frightened that a Night Rider might
    capture or kill me.
  • I touch the scars on my back from the whippings
    at the whipping tree.
  • I worry that I wont survive on my own.
  • I cry when I think of what it means to be free.
  • I am a strong FREED African American.
  • I understand President Lincoln has been shot.
  • I say it wont make a difference.
  • I dream that I will get my 40 acres and a mule.
  • I try to remain positive.
  • I hope for a better life.
  • I am a strong FREED African American.

27
Jim Crow Laws 15th amendment 14th Amendment 13th
Amendment Freedmens Bureau
Match these words with their descriptions
  1. Helped 4 million freedmen after the war.
  2. Laws that enforced segregation
  3. Granted citizenship to African Americans
  4. Abolished slavery
  5. Granted all men the right to vote.

28
Short Answer Questions(in COMPLETE sentences)
  1. What was the overall goal of the 13th, 14th, and
    15th amendments?
  2. How were the lives of African Americans made more
    difficult after the end of Reconstruction?
  3. What effect did black codes have on African
    Americans?
  4. Why were many African Americans still unable to
    vote even after the 15th amendment was passed?
  5. Explain the system of sharecropping. Why many
    African Americans forced into this system after
    being freed? Sharecropping is
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