Control Of The South After Reconstruction example essay topic
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was the beginning of Reconstruction in the U.S. The Emancipation Proclamation freed all of the slaves in the Confederate States still in rebellion but did not free those of the border states. The Proclamation did not actually free the slaves in the south, as there was no way Lincoln could do this without military force, but it did help strengthen the moral of the troops in the Union army by giving them something better to fight for. On the other hand, some Union troops that did not want to fight a war over slavery left the Union Army and refused to fight. Lincoln had more plans that just to free the slaves. During the war Lincoln had expanded his presidency.
With his power he hoped to set up loyal governments in the Southern states that were under Union control. Lincoln appointed new temporary governors and instructed each to call a convention to create a new state government as soon as a group of the state's citizen totaling 10 percent of the voters in the 1860 presidential election had signed oaths of loyalty to the Union. Under this plan new government were formed in Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas but the Congress refused to recognize them. Republicans in Congress did not want a quick restoration, for the reason that it would bring Democratic representatives and senators to Washington, and in 1864 Congress passed the Wade-Davis Reconstruction Bill.
This bill would have delayed the process of rejoining the Union until 50 percent of the people took an oath of loyalty but Lincoln pocket vetoed the bill. Abraham Lincoln was assassinated just as the South surrendered in April 1865, and then Andrew Johnson inherited the problem of Reconstruction. Johnson was just the right person who didn t need to be president at this critical time. He was a southerner with mixed views and the south did not trust him. Also the Republican Congress did not like the southern democrat. Johnson required that the new states ratify the 13th Amendment freeing the slaves, abolish slavery in their own constitutions, discard debts incurred while in rebellion, and declare secession null and void.
States that accepted these conditions would be readmitted. The Radical Republicans thought otherwise. The Radical Republicans in Congress thought they should control Reconstruction and wished to punish the South for causing the Civil War. Some of these Republicans wished to create a Southern society where blacks and whites were equal. These Republicans opposed the Southern Black Codes, which were harsh laws passed against freed slaves to force them to go back to working the land so the former masters could once again be in control. In response to the Black Codes, the Radical Republicans established the Freedman's Bureau to help former slaves get an education and do more that just farm.
Also the Radical Republicans required the passage of the Civil Rights Bill and the fourteenth amendment. Only Tennessee ratified the 14th amendment and was allowed to rejoin the Union. The remaining ten Confederate states were occupied by United States troops. The states were slowly readmitted back into the Union after each state was deemed Reconstructed. Passage of the fifteenth amendment was mandatory for the last four states to re-enter. In the South, during the Reconstruction period the new state governments were dominated by scalawags, who were Southern whites who supported Reconstruction and who used political power chiefly for political gain, and carpetbaggers who were Northerners who went to the South after the Civil War and entered politics for personal gain.
At the end of the Reconstruction period, Southern Democrats were gradually regaining control, and by 1877 when all the troops were removed, the whites had almost total control again. Restrictions were put on blacks political rights and eventually laws were passed that discriminated against blacks, called Jim Crow Laws. In my opinion, Reconstruction was a failure. The Blacks were never treated as equals and the whites were allowed to regain control of the south after Reconstruction. It took an extra 80 years before blacks were treated as equals, and even then it's not always true.
Reconstruction is still going on today and in my opinion, will still be going on for at least another half a century 338.