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1  sur  69
Ms. Susan M. Pojer
Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
K e y Q u e s ti o n s
                                 4. What branch
 1. How do we
                                  of government
bring the South
                                  should control
 back into the
                                  the process of
     Union?
                                 Reconstruction?



         2. How do we       3. How do we
          rebuild the       integrate and
        South after its    protect newly-
          destruction        emancipated
        during the war?   black freedmen?
P r e s i d e n t L i n c o ln ’s
       10% Plan la n
             P
          *   Proclamation of Amnesty and
              Reconstruction (December 8, 1863)
          *   Replace majority rule with “loyal rule” in
              the South.
          *   He didn’t consult Congress regarding
              Reconstruction.
          *   Pardon to all but the highest ranking
              military and civilian Confederate
              officers.
          *   When 10% of the voting population in
              the 1860 election had taken an oath of
              loyalty and established a government, it
              would be recognized.
P r e s i d e n t L i n c o ln ’s
              P la n
 1864  “Lincoln Governments”
  formed in LA, TN, AR
   *   “loyal assemblies”
   *   They were weak and
       dependent on the
       Northern army for
       their survival.
W a d e -D a v i s B i ll (1 8 6 4 )
            Required 50% of the number
             of 1860 voters to take an
             “iron clad” oath of allegiance
             (swearing they had never
             voluntarily aided the
             rebellion ).
Senator     Required a state                 Congressman
Benjamin     constitutional convention           Henry
  Wade                                          W. Davis
 (R-OH)
             before the election of state       (R-MD)
             officials.
            Enacted specific safeguards
             of freedmen’s liberties.
W a d e -D a v i s B i ll
 “Iron-Clad” Oath. 6 4 )
            (1 8
 “State Suicide” Theory [MA Senator
  Charles Sumner]
 “Conquered Provinces” Position
  [PA Congressman Thaddeus Stevens]


  President     Pocket      Wade-Davis
   Lincoln       Veto          Bill
Je ff D a v i s U n d e r A r r e s t
th
   1 3        Am e n d m e n t
 Ratified in December, 1865.
 Neither slavery nor involuntary
  servitude, except as punishment for
  crime whereof the party shall have been
  duly convicted, shall exist within the
  United States or any place subject to
  their jurisdiction.
 Congress shall have power to enforce
  this article by appropriate legislation.
F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u
           (1 8 6 5 )
                Bureau of Refugees,
                 Freedmen, and
                 Abandoned Lands.
                Many former northern
                 abolitionists risked
                 their lives to help
                 southern freedmen.
                Called “carpetbaggers”
                 by white southern
                 Democrats.
F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u
S e e n Th ro u g h
S o u th e rn
Eyes
   Plenty to
    eat and
  nothing to
      do.
F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u
           S ch ool
P re s i d e n t An d re w
         Jo h n s o n
               Jacksonian Democrat.
                Anti-Aristocrat.
                White Supremacist.
                Agreed with Lincoln
                 that states had never
                 legally left the Union.

                Damn the negroes! I am
                fighting these traitorous
                aristocrats, their masters!
P r e s i d e n t Jo h n s o n ’s P la n
 Offered amnesty upon simple oath)to all except
                   (1 0 % +
  Confederate civil and military officers and those with
  property over $20,000 (they could apply directly to
  Johnson)
 In new constitutions, they must accept minimum
  conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts.
 Named provisional governors in Confederate states and
  called them to oversee elections for constitutional
  conventions.
                1. Disenfranchised certain leading Confederates.
                2. Pardoned planter aristocrats brought them back
  EFFECTS?
                  to political power to control state organizations.
                3. Republicans were outraged that planter elite
                  were back in power in the South!
S la v e r y i s D e a d ?
G ro w i n g N o rth e rn
        A la r m !
 Many Southern state
  constitutions fell short of
  minimum requirements.
 Johnson granted 13,500 special
  pardons.
 Revival of southern defiance.


         BLACK CODES
B la c k C o d e s
 Purpose:
   *   Guarantee stable labor
       supply now that blacks
       were emancipated.
   *   Restore pre-emancipation
       system of race relations.


 Forced many blacks to
  become sharecroppers
  [tenant farmers].
C o n g re s s B re a k s w i th th e
 Congress barsP r e s i d e n t
               Southern
  Congressional delegates.
 Joint Committee on
  Reconstruction created.
 February, 1866  President
  vetoed the Freedmen’s
  Bureau bill.
 March, 1866  Johnson
  vetoed the 1866 Civil Rights Act.
 Congress passed both bills over
  Johnson’s vetoes  1st in
  U. S. history!!
Jo h n s o n t h e M a r t y r /
          S a m If my n is to be shed
                 s o blood
                  because I vindicate the
                  Union and the preservation
                  of this government in its
                  original purity and character,
                  let it be shed; let an altar to
                  the Union be erected, and
                  then, if it is necessary, take
                  me and lay me upon it, and
                  the blood that now warms
                  and animates my existence
                  shall be poured out as a fit
                  libation to the Union.

                           (February 1866)
1 4 th A m e n d m e n t
 Ratified in July, 1868.
   *    Provide a constitutional guarantee of the
        rights and security of freed people.
   *    Insure against neo-Confederate political
        power.
   *    Enshrine the national debt while repudiating
        that of the Confederacy.

 Southern states would be punished for
  denying the right to vote to black
  citizens!
T h e B a la n c e o f P o w e r
               i n C o n g re s s

              State   White Citizens   Freedmen
               SC        291,000       411,000
               MS        353,000       436,000
               LA        357,000       350,000
               GA        591,000       465,000
               AL        596,000       437,000
               VA        719,000       533,000
               NC        631,000       331,000
T h e 1 8 6 6 B i -E le c t i o n
 A referendum on Radical Reconstruction.
 Johnson made an ill-conceived propaganda
  tour around the country to push his plan.
 Republicans
  won a 3-1
  majority in
  both houses
  and gained
  control of
  every northern         Johnson’s “Swing around
  state.                       the Circle”
R a d i c a l P la n fo r
         R e a d in thesterritories were
 Civil authorities m i sion
  subject to military supervision.
 Required new state constitutions,
  including
  black suffrage and ratification of the 13th
  and 14th Amendments.
 In March, 1867, Congress passed an act
  that authorized the military to enroll
  eligible black voters and begin the process
  of constitution making.
R e c o n s tru c ti o n Ac ts o f
               1 867
 Military Reconstruction Act
     *   Restart Reconstruction in the 10 Southern states
         that refused to ratify the 14th Amendment.
     *   Divide the 10 “unreconstructed states” into 5
         military
         districts.
R e c o n s tru c ti o n Ac ts o f
                1 867
 Command of the Army Act
    *   The President must issue all
        Reconstruction orders through
        the commander of the military.
 Tenure of Office Act
    *   The President could not remove
        any officials [esp. Cabinet members]
        without the Senate’s consent, if the
        position originally required Senate
        approval.
           Designed to protect radical
            members of Lincoln’s government.
           A question of the
            constitutionality of this law.     Edwin Stanton
P r e s i d e n t Jo h n s o n ’s
          I m p eStantonm February, 1868.
 Johnson removed
                  a c h in e n t
 Johnson replaced generals in the field who were
  more sympathetic to Radical Reconstruction.
 The House impeached him on February 24
                             before even
                             drawing up the
                             charges by a
                             vote of 126 – 47!
Th e S e n a te Tri a l




 11 week trial.
 Johnson acquitted
  35 to 19 (one short of
  required 2/3s vote).
S h a re c ro p p i n g
Te n a n c y & th e C ro p Li e n
 Furnishing Merchant S TenanttFarmer
                       ys em         Landowner
 Loan tools and seed     Plants crop,           Rents land to tenant
  up to 60% interest       harvests in             in exchange for ¼
  to tenant farmer to      autumn.                 to ½ of tenant
  plant spring crop.                               farmer’s future
                          Turns over up to ½      crop.
 Farmer also secures      of crop to land
  food, clothing, and      owner as payment of
  other necessities on     rent.
  credit from
  merchant until the      Tenant gives
  harvest.                 remainder of crop
                           to merchant in
 Merchant holds           payment of debt.
  “lien” {mortgage} on
  part of tenant’s
  future crops as
  repayment of debt.
B la c k & W h i t e P o li t i c a l
       P a rti c i p a ti o n
E s t a b li s h m e n t o f
            H i s t o r i c a lly
B la c k C o lle g e s i n t h e S o u t h
B la c k S e n a t e & H o u s e
         D e le g a t e s
Cooe R ue
   lrd l
int So t
   he uh?
B la c k s i n S o u t h e r n
 Core voters wereoblack i c s
               P li t veterans.
 Blacks were politically unprepared.
 Blacks could register and vote in states since
  1867.
                                 The 15th
                                  Amendment
                                  guaranteed
                                  federal voting.
th
     1 5        Am e n d m e n t
 Ratified in 1870.
 The right of citizens of the United States
  to vote shall not be denied or abridged by
  the United States or by any state on
  account of race, color, or previous condition
  of servitude.
 The Congress shall have power to enforce
  this article by appropriate legislation.
 Women’s rights groups were furious that
  they were not granted the vote!
T h e “I n v i s i b le E m p i r e o f
           th e S o u th ”
T h e F a i lu r e o f F e d e r a l
        E n fo r c e m 1870 & 1871
 Enforcement Acts of   ent
   [also known as the KKK Act].
                         “The Lost Cause.”
                         The rise of the
                          “Bourbons.”
                         Redeemers
                          (prewar
                          Democrats and
                          Union Whigs).
Th e C i vi l R i g h ts Ac t o f
              1 875
 Crime for any individual to deny full &
  equal use of public conveyances and
  public places.
 Prohibited discrimination in jury
  selection.
 Shortcoming  lacked a strong
                enforcement mechanism.
 No new civil rights act was attempted
  for 90 years!
T h e 1 8 6 8 R e p u b li c a n
           Ti ck e t
Th e 1 8 6 8 D e m o c ra ti c
           Ti ck e t
Wv t B lo Shir!
 aing he ody t




          Republican “Southern
               Strategy”
1 8 6 8 P re s i d e n ti a l
       E le c t i o n
P r e s i d e n t U ly s s e s S .
             G ra n t
G ra n t Ad m i n i s tra ti o n
 Grant presided c a nan era ls
              S over d a of
  unprecedented
  growth and
  corruption.
   *   Credit Mobilier

       Scandal.
   *   Whiskey Ring.
   *   The “Indian
       Ring.”
Th e Tw e e d
R in g
    i n N YC




 William Marcy Tweed
 (notorious head of Tammany Hall’s political machine)


 [Thomas Nast  crusading cartoonist/reporter]
W Stl t Pepl’sMo y?
 ho oe he o e ne
AndThe Sa HeWnt aThir Tem
     y y     as     d r
T h e E le c t i o n o f 1 8 7 2
                  Rumors of corruption
                   during Grant’s first
                   term discredit
                   Republicans.
                  Horace Greeley runs
                   as a Democrat/Liberal
                   Republican candidate.
                  Greeley attacked as a
                   fool and a crank.
                  Greeley died on
                   November 29, 1872!
1 8 7 2 P re s i d e n ti a l
       E le c t i o n
P o p u la r V o t e fo r
P re s i d e n t: 1 8 7 2
Th e P a n i c o f 1 8 7 3
                           It raises “the money
                            question.”
                              *   debtors seek
                                  inflationary
                                  monetary policy by
                                  continuing circulation
                                  of greenbacks.
                              *   creditors, intellectuals
                                  support hard money.
                           1875  Specie
                            Redemption Act.
 1876  Greenback Party formed & makes gains in
         congressional races  The “Crime of ’73’!
L e g a l C h a lle n g e s
       t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th
          Am e n d m e n ts
 The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
   The court offered a narrow definition of the
    14th Amendment.
     It distinguished between national and state
      citizenship.
     It gave the states primary authority over
      citizens’ rights.
          Therefore, the courts weakened civil rights
           enforcement!
L e g a l C h a lle n g e s
         t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th
            Am e n d m e n ts
 Bradwell vs. Illinois (1873)
   Myra Bradwell, a female attorney,
    had been denied the right to
    practice law in Illinois.
      She argued that in the 14th Amendment, it said that
       the state had unconstitutionally abridged her
       “privileges and immunities” as a citizen.
      The Supreme Court rejected her claim, alluding to
       women’s traditional role in the home.
           Therefore, she should NOT be practicing law!
L e g a l C h a lle n g e s
        t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th
 U. S. vs.A m e n d al. (1876)s
           Reese, et. m e n t
   The Court restricted congressional power to
    enforce the KKK Act.
   The court ruled that the STATE alone could
    confer voting rights on individuals.
     The 15th Amendment did NOT guarantee a citizen’s
      right to vote, but just listed certain impermissible
      grounds to deny suffrage.
          Therefore, a path lay open for Southern states to
           disenfranchise blacks for supposedly non-racial reasons
           [like lack of education, lack of property, etc.]
L e g a l C h a lle n g e s
       t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th
          Am e n d m e n ts
 U. S. vs. Cruickshank (1876)
   LA white supremacists accused of attacking a
    meeting of Blacks & were convicted under the
    1870 Enforcement Acts.
     The Court held that the 14th Amendment extended
      the federal power to protect civil rights ONLY in
      cases involving discrimination by STATES.
          Therefore, discrimination by individuals or groups were
           NOT covered.
L e g a l C h a lle n g e s
        t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th
           Am e n d m e n ts
 Civil Rights Cases (1883)
    The Court declared the 1875 Civil Rights Act
     unconstitutional.
      The Court held that the 14th Amendment gave
       Congress the power to outlaw discriminations by
       the states, but NOT by private individuals.
      Black people must no longer “be the special
       favorites of the laws.”
           Therefore, this marked the end of federal attempts to
            protect African American rights until well into the 20c!
N o rth e rn S u p p o rt W a n e s
 “Grantism” & corruption.
 Panic of 1873 [6-year
  depression].
 Concern over westward
  expansion 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 or
       greenbacks.
1 8 7 6 P re s i d e n ti a l Ti c k e ts
“ eio lB aa e ”
 R g na lnc?
1 8 7 6 P re s i d e n ti a l
       E le c t i o n
T h e P o li t i c a l C r i s i s o f
              1 877




 “Corrupt Bargain”
  Part II?
H a y e s P r e v a i ls
Als t We o Chil o
       a, he os f dhod…




Sammy Tilden—Boo-Hoo! Ruthy Hayes’s got my
   Presidency, and he won’t give it to me!
A P o li t i c a l C r i s i s : T h e
“C o m p r o m i s e ” o f 1 8 7 7

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Reconstruction

  • 1. Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
  • 2. K e y Q u e s ti o n s 4. What branch 1. How do we of government bring the South should control back into the the process of Union? Reconstruction? 2. How do we 3. How do we rebuild the integrate and South after its protect newly- destruction emancipated during the war? black freedmen?
  • 3.
  • 4. P r e s i d e n t L i n c o ln ’s  10% Plan la n P * Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction (December 8, 1863) * Replace majority rule with “loyal rule” in the South. * He didn’t consult Congress regarding Reconstruction. * Pardon to all but the highest ranking military and civilian Confederate officers. * When 10% of the voting population in the 1860 election had taken an oath of loyalty and established a government, it would be recognized.
  • 5. P r e s i d e n t L i n c o ln ’s P la n  1864  “Lincoln Governments” formed in LA, TN, AR * “loyal assemblies” * They were weak and dependent on the Northern army for their survival.
  • 6. W a d e -D a v i s B i ll (1 8 6 4 )  Required 50% of the number of 1860 voters to take an “iron clad” oath of allegiance (swearing they had never voluntarily aided the rebellion ). Senator  Required a state Congressman Benjamin constitutional convention Henry Wade W. Davis (R-OH) before the election of state (R-MD) officials.  Enacted specific safeguards of freedmen’s liberties.
  • 7. W a d e -D a v i s B i ll  “Iron-Clad” Oath. 6 4 ) (1 8  “State Suicide” Theory [MA Senator Charles Sumner]  “Conquered Provinces” Position [PA Congressman Thaddeus Stevens] President Pocket Wade-Davis Lincoln Veto Bill
  • 8. Je ff D a v i s U n d e r A r r e s t
  • 9. th 1 3 Am e n d m e n t  Ratified in December, 1865.  Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place subject to their jurisdiction.  Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
  • 10. F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u (1 8 6 5 )  Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands.  Many former northern abolitionists risked their lives to help southern freedmen.  Called “carpetbaggers” by white southern Democrats.
  • 11. F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u S e e n Th ro u g h S o u th e rn Eyes Plenty to eat and nothing to do.
  • 12. F r e e d m e n ’s B u r e a u S ch ool
  • 13.
  • 14. P re s i d e n t An d re w Jo h n s o n  Jacksonian Democrat.  Anti-Aristocrat.  White Supremacist.  Agreed with Lincoln that states had never legally left the Union. Damn the negroes! I am fighting these traitorous aristocrats, their masters!
  • 15. P r e s i d e n t Jo h n s o n ’s P la n  Offered amnesty upon simple oath)to all except (1 0 % + Confederate civil and military officers and those with property over $20,000 (they could apply directly to Johnson)  In new constitutions, they must accept minimum conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts.  Named provisional governors in Confederate states and called them to oversee elections for constitutional conventions. 1. Disenfranchised certain leading Confederates. 2. Pardoned planter aristocrats brought them back EFFECTS? to political power to control state organizations. 3. Republicans were outraged that planter elite were back in power in the South!
  • 16. S la v e r y i s D e a d ?
  • 17. G ro w i n g N o rth e rn A la r m !  Many Southern state constitutions fell short of minimum requirements.  Johnson granted 13,500 special pardons.  Revival of southern defiance. BLACK CODES
  • 18. B la c k C o d e s  Purpose: * Guarantee stable labor supply now that blacks were emancipated. * Restore pre-emancipation system of race relations.  Forced many blacks to become sharecroppers [tenant farmers].
  • 19. C o n g re s s B re a k s w i th th e  Congress barsP r e s i d e n t Southern Congressional delegates.  Joint Committee on Reconstruction created.  February, 1866  President vetoed the Freedmen’s Bureau bill.  March, 1866  Johnson vetoed the 1866 Civil Rights Act.  Congress passed both bills over Johnson’s vetoes  1st in U. S. history!!
  • 20. Jo h n s o n t h e M a r t y r / S a m If my n is to be shed s o blood because I vindicate the Union and the preservation of this government in its original purity and character, let it be shed; let an altar to the Union be erected, and then, if it is necessary, take me and lay me upon it, and the blood that now warms and animates my existence shall be poured out as a fit libation to the Union. (February 1866)
  • 21.
  • 22. 1 4 th A m e n d m e n t  Ratified in July, 1868. * Provide a constitutional guarantee of the rights and security of freed people. * Insure against neo-Confederate political power. * Enshrine the national debt while repudiating that of the Confederacy.  Southern states would be punished for denying the right to vote to black citizens!
  • 23. T h e B a la n c e o f P o w e r i n C o n g re s s State White Citizens Freedmen SC 291,000 411,000 MS 353,000 436,000 LA 357,000 350,000 GA 591,000 465,000 AL 596,000 437,000 VA 719,000 533,000 NC 631,000 331,000
  • 24. T h e 1 8 6 6 B i -E le c t i o n  A referendum on Radical Reconstruction.  Johnson made an ill-conceived propaganda tour around the country to push his plan.  Republicans won a 3-1 majority in both houses and gained control of every northern Johnson’s “Swing around state. the Circle”
  • 25. R a d i c a l P la n fo r R e a d in thesterritories were  Civil authorities m i sion subject to military supervision.  Required new state constitutions, including black suffrage and ratification of the 13th and 14th Amendments.  In March, 1867, Congress passed an act that authorized the military to enroll eligible black voters and begin the process of constitution making.
  • 26. R e c o n s tru c ti o n Ac ts o f 1 867  Military Reconstruction Act * Restart Reconstruction in the 10 Southern states that refused to ratify the 14th Amendment. * Divide the 10 “unreconstructed states” into 5 military districts.
  • 27. R e c o n s tru c ti o n Ac ts o f 1 867  Command of the Army Act * The President must issue all Reconstruction orders through the commander of the military.  Tenure of Office Act * The President could not remove any officials [esp. Cabinet members] without the Senate’s consent, if the position originally required Senate approval.  Designed to protect radical members of Lincoln’s government.  A question of the constitutionality of this law. Edwin Stanton
  • 28. P r e s i d e n t Jo h n s o n ’s I m p eStantonm February, 1868.  Johnson removed a c h in e n t  Johnson replaced generals in the field who were more sympathetic to Radical Reconstruction.  The House impeached him on February 24 before even drawing up the charges by a vote of 126 – 47!
  • 29. Th e S e n a te Tri a l  11 week trial.  Johnson acquitted 35 to 19 (one short of required 2/3s vote).
  • 30.
  • 31. S h a re c ro p p i n g
  • 32. Te n a n c y & th e C ro p Li e n Furnishing Merchant S TenanttFarmer ys em Landowner  Loan tools and seed  Plants crop,  Rents land to tenant up to 60% interest harvests in in exchange for ¼ to tenant farmer to autumn. to ½ of tenant plant spring crop. farmer’s future  Turns over up to ½ crop.  Farmer also secures of crop to land food, clothing, and owner as payment of other necessities on rent. credit from merchant until the  Tenant gives harvest. remainder of crop to merchant in  Merchant holds payment of debt. “lien” {mortgage} on part of tenant’s future crops as repayment of debt.
  • 33. B la c k & W h i t e P o li t i c a l P a rti c i p a ti o n
  • 34. E s t a b li s h m e n t o f H i s t o r i c a lly B la c k C o lle g e s i n t h e S o u t h
  • 35. B la c k S e n a t e & H o u s e D e le g a t e s
  • 36. Cooe R ue lrd l int So t he uh?
  • 37. B la c k s i n S o u t h e r n  Core voters wereoblack i c s P li t veterans.  Blacks were politically unprepared.  Blacks could register and vote in states since 1867.  The 15th Amendment guaranteed federal voting.
  • 38. th 1 5 Am e n d m e n t  Ratified in 1870.  The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.  The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.  Women’s rights groups were furious that they were not granted the vote!
  • 39. T h e “I n v i s i b le E m p i r e o f th e S o u th ”
  • 40. T h e F a i lu r e o f F e d e r a l E n fo r c e m 1870 & 1871  Enforcement Acts of ent [also known as the KKK Act].  “The Lost Cause.”  The rise of the “Bourbons.”  Redeemers (prewar Democrats and Union Whigs).
  • 41. Th e C i vi l R i g h ts Ac t o f 1 875  Crime for any individual to deny full & equal use of public conveyances and public places.  Prohibited discrimination in jury selection.  Shortcoming  lacked a strong enforcement mechanism.  No new civil rights act was attempted for 90 years!
  • 42.
  • 43. T h e 1 8 6 8 R e p u b li c a n Ti ck e t
  • 44. Th e 1 8 6 8 D e m o c ra ti c Ti ck e t
  • 45. Wv t B lo Shir! aing he ody t Republican “Southern Strategy”
  • 46. 1 8 6 8 P re s i d e n ti a l E le c t i o n
  • 47. P r e s i d e n t U ly s s e s S . G ra n t
  • 48. G ra n t Ad m i n i s tra ti o n  Grant presided c a nan era ls S over d a of unprecedented growth and corruption. * Credit Mobilier Scandal. * Whiskey Ring. * The “Indian Ring.”
  • 49. Th e Tw e e d R in g i n N YC William Marcy Tweed (notorious head of Tammany Hall’s political machine) [Thomas Nast  crusading cartoonist/reporter]
  • 50. W Stl t Pepl’sMo y? ho oe he o e ne
  • 51. AndThe Sa HeWnt aThir Tem y y as d r
  • 52. T h e E le c t i o n o f 1 8 7 2  Rumors of corruption during Grant’s first term discredit Republicans.  Horace Greeley runs as a Democrat/Liberal Republican candidate.  Greeley attacked as a fool and a crank.  Greeley died on November 29, 1872!
  • 53. 1 8 7 2 P re s i d e n ti a l E le c t i o n
  • 54. P o p u la r V o t e fo r P re s i d e n t: 1 8 7 2
  • 55. Th e P a n i c o f 1 8 7 3  It raises “the money question.” * debtors seek inflationary monetary policy by continuing circulation of greenbacks. * creditors, intellectuals support hard money.  1875  Specie Redemption Act.  1876  Greenback Party formed & makes gains in congressional races  The “Crime of ’73’!
  • 56. L e g a l C h a lle n g e s t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th Am e n d m e n ts  The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)  The court offered a narrow definition of the 14th Amendment.  It distinguished between national and state citizenship.  It gave the states primary authority over citizens’ rights.  Therefore, the courts weakened civil rights enforcement!
  • 57. L e g a l C h a lle n g e s t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th Am e n d m e n ts  Bradwell vs. Illinois (1873)  Myra Bradwell, a female attorney, had been denied the right to practice law in Illinois.  She argued that in the 14th Amendment, it said that the state had unconstitutionally abridged her “privileges and immunities” as a citizen.  The Supreme Court rejected her claim, alluding to women’s traditional role in the home.  Therefore, she should NOT be practicing law!
  • 58. L e g a l C h a lle n g e s t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th  U. S. vs.A m e n d al. (1876)s Reese, et. m e n t  The Court restricted congressional power to enforce the KKK Act.  The court ruled that the STATE alone could confer voting rights on individuals.  The 15th Amendment did NOT guarantee a citizen’s right to vote, but just listed certain impermissible grounds to deny suffrage.  Therefore, a path lay open for Southern states to disenfranchise blacks for supposedly non-racial reasons [like lack of education, lack of property, etc.]
  • 59. L e g a l C h a lle n g e s t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th Am e n d m e n ts  U. S. vs. Cruickshank (1876)  LA white supremacists accused of attacking a meeting of Blacks & were convicted under the 1870 Enforcement Acts.  The Court held that the 14th Amendment extended the federal power to protect civil rights ONLY in cases involving discrimination by STATES.  Therefore, discrimination by individuals or groups were NOT covered.
  • 60. L e g a l C h a lle n g e s t o t h e 1 4 th & 1 5 th Am e n d m e n ts  Civil Rights Cases (1883)  The Court declared the 1875 Civil Rights Act unconstitutional.  The Court held that the 14th Amendment gave Congress the power to outlaw discriminations by the states, but NOT by private individuals.  Black people must no longer “be the special favorites of the laws.”  Therefore, this marked the end of federal attempts to protect African American rights until well into the 20c!
  • 61.
  • 62. N o rth e rn S u p p o rt W a n e s  “Grantism” & corruption.  Panic of 1873 [6-year depression].  Concern over westward expansion 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 or greenbacks.
  • 63. 1 8 7 6 P re s i d e n ti a l Ti c k e ts
  • 64. “ eio lB aa e ” R g na lnc?
  • 65. 1 8 7 6 P re s i d e n ti a l E le c t i o n
  • 66. T h e P o li t i c a l C r i s i s o f 1 877  “Corrupt Bargain” Part II?
  • 67. H a y e s P r e v a i ls
  • 68. Als t We o Chil o a, he os f dhod… Sammy Tilden—Boo-Hoo! Ruthy Hayes’s got my Presidency, and he won’t give it to me!
  • 69. A P o li t i c a l C r i s i s : T h e “C o m p r o m i s e ” o f 1 8 7 7