
Reconstruction
Presentation
•
History
•
11th Grade
•
Easy
Matthew LaMunyon
Used 7+ times
FREE Resource
12 Slides • 8 Questions
1
Bellwork
Think about what success and failure mean to you. Consider a
time you have succeed or failed. On the next slide, you’ll be
asked to define success and failure in your own words in 2-3
sentences.
2
Open Ended
In your own words, what does success and failure mean to you? (2-3 sentences)
3
Reconstruction
HS.SS.H2.03: I can explain short and long-term effects of
American conflict.
4
13th Amendment
●1864 - Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, Arkansas, and
Louisiana all amended their constitutions to free their slaves
●Abolitionists feared that the Emancipation Proclamation
would be invalidated at the end of the war and that the
Southern states would react by re-establishing slavery
●President Lincoln persuaded the Republican-dominated
Congress to prohibit slavery, which they did when the 13th
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States was
passed on January 31, 1865
5
Southern Reconstruction
●With the union preserved, the nation entered a period
known as Reconstruction
●The government attempted to rebuild (and sometimes)
punish the South
●Lincoln did not want to make the South suffer
○Second inaugural address
●He wanted healing for both the Union and Confederate
states
●On April 14, 1865, just five days after the surrender, a
Confederate sympathizer named John Wilkes Booth
assassinated Lincoln as he attended a play at the Ford’s
theatre
6
Andrew Johnson and the Radical
Republicans
●With Lincoln's death, the presidency fell to Andrew Johnson
●Taking office while Congress was in recess, Johnson pursued his own plan of
reconstruction
○Known as Presidential Reconstruction
○Seen as far too lenient by many in the North
■States had to repeal secession ordinances and ratify the 13th amendment
●Conflict quickly arose between Johnson and the Radical Republicans
○Wanted immediate end of slavery during the war and punishment of the South after
■Former Confederate officers couldn’t hold elected office or vote, divided the South
into military districts, and required 51% swear an oath of allegiance - Radical
Reconstruction
■Upset because Johnson’s plan failed to offer African Americans full citizenship rights
■Believed Congress should oversee Reconstruction
●Republicans came to dominate southern government during Reconstruction
and drafted new state Constitutions which reflected the party’s ideals
○Union army was stationed throughout the South - Northern influence in the South
7
Fill in the Blanks
Type answer...
8
Multiple Choice
Who became president after Lincoln was assassinated?
John Wilkes Booth
Andrew Jackson
Ulysses Grant
Andrew Johnson
9
Match
Match the following
Radical Republicans
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Copperheads
Wanted the South to be punished
Wanted healing for Union and Confederacy
Wanted repeal of secession, 13th passed
Wanted war to end, even if union divided
Wanted the South to be punished
Wanted healing for Union and Confederacy
Wanted repeal of secession, 13th passed
Wanted war to end, even if union divided
10
The 14th Amendment and
Federal Legislation
●In 1866, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act, with the
intent of giving citizenship rights to freed slaves
●President Johnson opposed this measure, but congress
was able to override his veto
●Congress then passed the 14th amendment, which
guaranteed that no person regardless of race would be
deprived of life, liberty or property without due process
●It granted blacks the status of citizenship and was
ratified in 1868
11
Johnson’s Impeachment
●The battle between Johnson and Congress came to a
head in 1868
●Johnson tried to fire Secretary of War Edwin Stanton,
who had been appointed by Lincoln, because he was
closely tied to the Radical Republicans
●This violated the Tenure in Office Act, which limited the
president’s power to hire or fire government officials
●Led by Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, Congress voted
to impeach the president of the U.S.
●On May 16, 1868, the Senate voted to spare Johnson’s
presidency by just one vote
12
15th Amendment
●The last major piece of Reconstruction legislation was
the 15th Amendment - 1870, under Pres. Ulysses Grant
●It guaranteed no citizen may be denied the right to vote
by the U.S. or any state on the account of race, color, or
servitude
●The amendment had a great impact in the South by
guaranteeing African Americans the right to vote in
elections
13
Match
Match the following
13th Amendment
14th Amendment
15th Amendment
Makes slavery illegal
Gives citizenship rights to freed slaves
Right to vote - race, color, servitude
Makes slavery illegal
Gives citizenship rights to freed slaves
Right to vote - race, color, servitude
14
Dropdown
15
African Americans and Reconstruction:
Social Aspects
●The 13th amendment freed the slaves, now the freedmen
had to adjust to life after slavery
●They had no land or money - in order to survive many
turned to sharecropping - farmers rent land and farming
equipment from a landowner to grow crops
●Some sharecroppers tried tenant farming - similar to
sharecropping, but tenants own equipment, animals, and
maybe even nearby housing - rent land
16
African Americans and Reconstruction:
Social Aspects
●In 1865, Congress created the Freedmen’s Bureau to
provide clothing, medical attention, meals, education and
even some land to freed blacks and some poorer whites
●Continued rise of Black Churches in the South - became
centers for African American social and political life
●With the help of the Freedmen’s Bureau, churches, and the
southern African American community established the
first black schools
○Teachers were often African American soldiers who had acquired
some education while in the service - both child and adult students
17
African Americans and Reconstruction:
Political/Legal Aspects
●African Americans played an important role in southern
politics during Reconstruction
○600 African Americans in Southern state legislatures, few in Congress
●After Johnson took office and before Reconstruction, many
Southern states passed black codes - laws meant to keep
blacks subordinate to whites by restricting their rights
○For instance, blacks could not meet together after sunset, own weapons, or
rent property anywhere but in rural areas
○Black codes, in effect, continued the practice of slavery
●In response to Reconstruction, some whites advocated
violence against freed blacks - Ku Klux Klan
18
Compromise of 1877 and
the End of Reconstruction
●Because of the bad economy and scandals surrounding
President Grant, the Democrats were hopeful that they could
win the election of 1876
●The election was contested because state officials disputed
the results
●The Compromise of 1877 settled the dispute, the Democrats
agreed to Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) being president
and the Republicans agreed to end Reconstruction
●In addition, Southern states received federal money, more
power to govern themselves, and a promise to withdraw
federal troops
19
Fill in the Blanks
20
Open Ended
In your opinion, was Reconstruction a success or failure? Why? (2-3 sentences)
Bellwork
Think about what success and failure mean to you. Consider a
time you have succeed or failed. On the next slide, you’ll be
asked to define success and failure in your own words in 2-3
sentences.
Show answer
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