Reconstruction
 
Introduction
The Surrender of the Confederacy
The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
The Ascension of Johnson
The New Amendments
Civil Rights Act of 1866
The Radical Republicans
The Military Districts
Re-building the Southern Economy
Re-Admission to the Union
The Freedmen's Bureau
Riots in the South
Impeachment
Scalawags and Carpetbaggers
Jim Crow Laws
Election of 1869
Compromise of 1877

Reconstruction - Click on the links to the left to learn details.

What was Reconstruction?

Reconstruction refers to the period after the Civil War when the southern states were reintegrated into the Union. Immediately following the war, the southern states were in disarray. Not only were many towns and cities burned, looted and destroyed, but the southern states were still not part of the United States. Reconstruction aimed to integrate the southern states back into the Union while ensuring such states were ready to obey the new laws and measures resulting from the war. Many questions arose after the Civil War, and policies and bills passed during reconstruction aimed to answer them. The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 and 1868 divided ten confederate states into five military districts. Tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers were stationed in the south to ensure the tenets of reconstruction were honored.

Constitutional Amendments

As a result of the Civil War, three constitutional amendments were born. The 13th amendment prohibited slavery, the 14th granted Civil Rights to black people, and the 15th granted black people the right to vote. Although president Lincoln had called for a lenient plan in dealing with the southern states, Congress enacted a plan that required the former states to meet certain conditions such as acceptance of the aforementioned amendments.

Cultural Changes

The period of Reconstruction transformed southern society and culture. Many northerners, who were referred to as Carpetbaggers, moved to the south to participate in southern governments. The Republican party ( a political party formed in 1854) gained much power in the south and passed numerous Civil Rights laws including those that legalized interracial marriage, and provided black students with the opportunities to attend school. Furthermore, black people were given positions of political power in state senates. Black people became mayors, sheriffs, and judges.

Racial Tension

The cultural transformation resulted in considerable racial tension. Violent racist organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan were formed in an attempt to intimidate black people. Many white southerners joined the Republican party (they were called Scalawags), and others moved to border states such as Maryland and Kentucky, where the effects of northern occupation were absent.

Jim Crow Laws and Civil Rights Violations

Reconstruction ended in 1877. By that time, all states had been re-admitted to the Union. Nevertheless, the south remained an ominous place for black people. After twelve years of southern transformation, the north lost interest in pursuing and enforcing the laws and measures passed to ensure civil rights for black people. Many of the laws were soon overturned and conditions worsened for the black citizens of the south. The south convinced Congress to pass the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibited federal authorities from exercising any power or control over local enforcement agencies. In other words, law interpretation and enforcement were left to individual southern districts. Predictably, this led to gross violations of law and unfair treatment for black people. In 1883, the 14th amendment was rewritten to declare that Congress only had the power to outlaw public, rather than private discrimination. 13 years later, the famous Plessy v. Ferguson case ruled that state-mandated segregation (separation of races) was legal as long as the statute or ordinance provided for "separate but equal" facilities. Rulings such as these were referred to as Jim Crow laws, and were clearly passed to ensure that black people could not do the same things as white people. Such laws encouraged and promoted racial segregation and varied from district to district. Some required black people to drink at separate fountains and use separate bathrooms than white people. Others required black people to relinquish seats on public buses if a white person wanted their seat, and still others prohibited black people from attending the same schools at white people. Such laws existed until the 1964 Civil Rights Act, nearly 100 years after the Civil War.