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I) The Nation After the Civil War
- The Nation After the Civil War
- Critical Issues Settled by the North’s Victory
- Southern states would not secede
- Slavery would be abolished
- Lingering Questions
- Readmission of the Confederate states to the Union
- Treatment of ex-Confederate leaders
- Fate of former slaves
- The Rest of the Nation
- Rise of industry and manufacturing to political and economic prominence
- Opening of the trans-Mississippi West
- The Fate of the Union
- Reconstruction in Wartime
- The slavery question
- Emancipation Proclamation
- Thirteenth Amendment
- Reconstituting the Union
- Lincoln’s Ten-Percent Plan
- Wade-Davis Bill
- Aid for freed slaves
- efforts at land confiscation
- federal experiments in land and labor policy
- creation of the Freedmen’s Bureau
- Andrew Johnson and Presidential Reconstruction
- Johnson’s background and political beliefs
- Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction
- amnesty for former Confederates
- restitution of property, except slaves
- state governments
- The white South’s defiance
- ex-Confederates elected
- Black Codes
- Congressional Republicans’ response
- expanding and extending the Freedmen’s Bureau
- Civil Rights Bill
- Congress vs. Johnson
- The Fourteenth Amendment
- Provisions
- defines citizenship and its rights
- enshrines principle of "equality before law"
- Impact on 1866 midterm elections
- Radical Reconstruction and the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
- Congressional Radicals’ Reconstruction plan
- reinstituted military authority, except in Tennessee
- required states to ratify Fourteenth Amendment
- embraced black suffrage
- Tenure of Office Act
- Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
- reasons
- trial and acquittal
- Defeat of Land Reform
- Reasoning of supporters
- Conflict with basic Republican values
- Rejection of Stevens’s plan
- Southern states readmitted to union
- Election of 1868
- Nomination and election of Ulysses Grant
- Fifteenth Amendment
- The Recovering South
- A Land Shattered by War
- Physical devastation
- Economic collapse
- The Experience of Freedom
- Ex-slaves’ reactions to emancipation
- moving
- family reunification
- churches
- schools
- challenging deference and segregation
- Southern whites’ reactions to emancipation
- fear of social equality
- race riots and the Ku Klux Klan
- Land and Labor
- Conflicting needs and desires of freedmen and southern whites
- The emergence of sharecropping
- The crop-lien system
- Stagnation of the southern economy
- The Road to Redemption
- Economic Boom in the North and West
- The Republican Party in the South
- Black voters and officeholders
- Reconstruction state governments
- The Grant Administration
- Civil service reform
- Governmental corruption
- The Enforcement Acts
- The Election of 1872
- Liberal Republican Party
- Grant’s victory
- Reconstruction in Retreat
- Redeemers score political victories
- Panic of 1873
- Supreme Court restricts interpretation of Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
- The Election of 1876 and the Compromise of 1877
- Disputed returns
- Federal troops withdrawn from South
- Legacies
- The Fate of Freed Slaves
- Economic Legacies
- Political Legacies
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