Theme: Reconstruction was a small first step in securing civil and economic rights for blacks. When it ended, the federal government left blacks without the legal protections or material resources to resist white oppression. But Reconstruction did help African Americans create a social revolution and set legal precedents that could be exploited in the 20th century.
1) Radical Reconstruction
Failure of Moderate Reconstruction by the Johnson Administration.
-- Southern Political and Racial Behavior
-- Johnson's relations with Congress.
Radicals Take Over: 1866 Elections
-- "Moderate" Radical Reconstruction
-- Military Districts and Re-admission
-- Reconstruction Amendments--13th, 14th, and 15th.
2) Abandoning Reconstruction:
Southern Resistance
Panic of 1873
Waning Northern Support
Election of 1876
3) Political consequences of 1877 settlement.
Reconstruction ends
Condition of black citizenship
One party rule in South
4) Sections Compromise on Meaning of the War and Reconstruction
Southern Compromises
Northern Compromises
5) Social Implications of Freedom-- Autonomy and Separation
Location
Education
Family
Religion
6) Southern Economy--A New South?
Southern Poverty--Why Did It Lag?
1) Investment
2) Debt
3) Labor: The Dilemma of the South
White Goals
Black Goals
Compromise: Tenancy and Sharecropping
Cycle of debt
Single crop dependency
Poor technology
Small and Middle-class white farmers
Industrialization
-- Textiles, Iron, Tobacco
Why so little industry?
7) White over Black: Disenfranchisement and Violence
Jim Crow
Legal Basis of Jim Crow
-- Slaughterhouse Case (1873)
-- Civil Rights Cases (1883)
-- Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
Voting
1) Poll Tax or property qualification
2) Literacy or understanding test
3) Grandfather clause
Violence
-- The South: A Violent Society
-- The Value of Lynching
1) White Solidarity
2) Black Control
3) Psychological Benefits--Racial, Sexual, & Economic.