Directly following the civil war came a period of reconstruction era where Abraham Lincoln attempted to reunite the northern and southern states. During this time, goals were set for civil equality for blacks by the government. However, the hopes of the freed people were not met. Despite the government attempt to build equality and independence for the newly freed they were overturned by other citizens reluctant to follow the laws and lack of enforcement of the laws. The radical reconstruction involved radical republicans believing that blacks are in entitled to the same political rights and opportunities as whites.…
White southerner's rejection of the fourteenth amendment increased the influence of radical republicans. American feminists objected to the language of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments because the legislation extended voting rights to black men but not to women. The south, as you can imagine, did not exactly like the 13th amendment. They saw it as a blatant effervescence to the southern mentality. In response to these prolific actions taken by the north, the south fought back.…
The ratification of the 13th Amendment was a major victory for the North, and it was hoped that with the Emancipation Proclamation and the 13th Amendment, the effects of slavery in the United States would quickly begin to fade away. The original plan to readmit states after acceptance of the 13th was supported by President Andrew Johnson, but the Radical Republicans, as they became known, wanted more than just a return to normalcy. They wanted to keep the power they had attained during the war years. The South did not make it easy for Johnson, however, and the so-called Black Codes started to be passed in Southern states. Congressional inquiries into the Black Codes found them to be a new way of controlling freedmen, fraught with violence and cruelty.…
The Radical new the federal government was playing to big of a role in the states, however, some felt direct intervention in state affairs and laws designed to protect the blacks. Many believed in the had the right to compete in a free-labor economy and Congress extended the Freedman’s Bureau and began work on a Civil Rights Bill. President Johnson vetoed the Freedman’s Bureau Bill, saying it would bloat the government and he also vetoed the Civil Rights Bill, denying black have the same rights of property and whites. Johnson was pretty much a racist, event though the Radicals overturned Johnson’s Civil Rights Act veto. The first to piece of legislation to be overturned in history at the time, and Radical hoped it would enforce rights.…
After the Civil War the Republican Party push to pass the Thirteenth Amendment. The Amendment was passed in 1865 which abolished slavery in the United States. This was very important during the Reconstruction period because you now had over 4 million newly freed slaves. The Republicans tried to find new ways to help the newly freed slaves from adding the fourteenth and fifteenth amendment. These amendments were to protect newly free people civil rights and to guarantee that the men had the right to vote.…
The Radical Republicans held a specific vision of how Reconstruction should be carried out in the aftermath of the Civil War. Their ideas included many key elements that they believed were necessary to fully address the issues that had led to the conflict and to ensure that the newly reconstructed nation could move forward to build a long thriving nation. One of the central elements of the Radical Republicans' approach to Reconstruction was a commitment to ensuring that African Americans were granted full equality and citizenship rights. This included not only the abolition of slavery but also measures to protect the civil and political rights of formerly enslaved individuals.…
Following the assassination of President Lincoln, the Radicals initially welcomed President Andrew Johnson. However, Johnson made it clear he had no intention of pushing for the rights of freed blacks, and would instead minimalize Reconstruction in the South. As a measure to diminish executive power over Reconstruction, the Radicals would form the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, allowing for protectionist measures of Southern blacks to pass over President Johnson’s veto. (Britannica, 2017) Radical Republicans believed that the Union victory over the South created opportunity to solidify the principles of equal rights for all.…
Reconstruction was a very tumultuous time in American history. The civil war was over, the union emerging as the victor. The union’s defeat of the secessionist confederacy meant the complete abolition of slavery in America. This was a massive victory for African Americans, as it meant they now had the agency to live their lives as they pleased for the most part, enjoying freedom for the first time in their lives, unshackled from the institution of slavery that had kept them down for the entirety of America’s existence. However, the abolition of slavery was only the beginning of the fight for equal rights for African Americans.…
Reconstruction could not have succeeded without the aid of the freedmen, who contributed greatly to the adding of the Constitution that totally changed the society during the late 1800s. Many African Americans united themselves together after freedom was given to them due to the Emancipation Proclamation. Feeling eager to gain more equalities, they gathered together and petitioned to the federal government for the “right to vote and, on occasion, to organize their own ‘freedom ballots.’” For many freedmen, equality and liberty is not achieved until they also enjoy the right to have ownership over land and property. As a response to the desperate desire of the freedmen, the federal government passed the Thirteenth Amendment that guaranteed every…
An example for the future, Reconstruction governments in the south and in the federal government accomplished more than anyone could have imagined. Following the civil war, the Union appointed Republican governments in the former Confederate states. These governments did much more than restore the states to their former glory: they instilled their values in the laws. The states’ laws were more pluralistic than ever, and quality of life for African Americans was greatly improved.…
During the Reconstruction Era there was many things being enforced and being changed in America. There was new additions to the Constitution such as the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments. The Thirteenth Amendment states that slavery and involuntary servitude is illegal, which means that the Thirteenth Amendment…
Freedom means Nothing After the Civil War, America was going through a “Reconstruction” period. African Americans were free now but they had to adjust to a new way of living. Because many people did not accept the abolishment of slavery, it was difficult for African Americans to be free. During the reconstruction era, African Americans were free by law, but no resources and racism kept African Americans in slavery. African Americans were still slaves because it was difficult for African Americans to make a living without having to depend on white people.…
From the years of 1861-1865 the bloodiest war was fought between the North and South, for the reuniting of the two nations, and to hopefully resolve the conflict of slavery. Even though the war lead to many casualties and violent actions, and ultimately the end of legal slavery, the time period after the war ended up being a disappointment to many. Reconstruction was meant to bring the nation back together, and for the United States to refurbish the former slave, and rebellious population. While this goal may have been attainable with President Abraham Lincoln, his death signaled the beginning of a difficult time. His successor, Andrew Johnson, was in fact racist, and therefore did not support the Reconstruction goals of African American…
Ja'Mes Smith 4 March 2017 American Literature Honors Mrs. Begick The Loss of Basic Rights with Black Codes or Racial Segregation with Jim Crow? The result of the Civil War in 1865 positively and negatively affected African Americans during the Reconstruction era. The positive outcome that came out of the victory of the Civil War was the freedom gained by millions of slaves from the South. Freeing the slaves, however negatively resulted in the creation of Black Codes, which were enforced by whites, to control the basic rights of African American people. When the Reconstruction Era came to an end in 1877, many laws from the Black Codes were passed and helped build the Jim Crow Laws that implemented racial segregation in the…
The radical republicans believed blacks were entitled to the same political right and opportunities as whites. They felt that they had to create laws designed to protect the emancipated blacks. Congress introduced a bull that would extend the Freedman's bureau and…