Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing...

45
Chapter 17: Chapter 17: Assassination and Assassination and Reconstruction Reconstruction

Transcript of Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing...

Page 1: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Chapter 17: Chapter 17: Assassination and Assassination and

ReconstructionReconstruction

Page 2: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Chapter Focus Questions Chapter Focus Questions

What were the competing political plans for What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

How difficult was the transition from How difficult was the transition from slavery to freedom for African Americans?slavery to freedom for African Americans?

What was the political and social legacy of What was the political and social legacy of Reconstruction in the southern states?Reconstruction in the southern states?

What were the post-Civil War What were the post-Civil War transformations in the economic and transformations in the economic and political life of the North?political life of the North?

Page 3: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 4: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Lincoln on April 10, 1865 – 5 days before his death

Page 5: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Lincoln with son Tad on February 9th, 1864

Page 6: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

John Wilkes Booth 1838-1865

Page 7: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Ford’s Theater – Lincoln assassinated while watching Our American Cousin

Page 8: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Artist’s portrayal of assassination – “sic semper tyrannis” [Thus always to

tyrants]

Page 9: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Booth breaks leg when lands on Theater stage

Page 10: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Reward poster for the conspirators – Booth trapped two weeks later in a VA barn

Page 11: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Executions of Lewis Paine, George Atzerodt, David Herold, and Mary Surratt

on July 7, 1865 – 8 were found guilt by a military tribunal, some went to prison

Page 12: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Lincoln’s funeral procession on Pennsylvania Avenue – a special funeral train

took 2 weeks to Springfield, Illinois [1968 RFK – “Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water”]

Page 13: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Andrew Johnson 1808-1875 – pardoned 13,000 former Confederates,

impeached but found not guilty by one vote

Page 14: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Senator Charles Sumner of MA -- a chief architect of Congressional Reconstruction

Page 15: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Rep. Thaddeus Stevens 1792-1868 – helped secure Civil Rights Act of 1866,

helped draft 14th Amendment, Military Reconstruction Act of 1867

Page 16: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 17: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 18: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 19: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Former slave pens in Alexandra, VA

Page 20: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Freedmen at Richmond, VA April 1865

Page 21: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

1872 – African Americans in Congress [l to r] Sen Hiram Revels, Miss; Rep Benjamin Turner, AL; Rep Robert DeLarge, SC; Josiah Walls, FLA; Joseph

Rainey, SC; Robert Brown Elliott, SC

Page 22: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Sen. Blanche Kelso Bruce, Mississippi elected in 1874, Oberlin graduate

Page 23: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Sen. Hiram Revels, US Senate from Mississippi in 1870

Page 24: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Primary school for Vicksburg freemen – Freedmen’s Bureau established March 3, 1865

Page 25: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Howard University law school, 1900 – Howard was established in Washington,

D.C. in 1867 named after Oliver O. Howard, director of the Freedman’s Bureau

Page 26: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

1876 voting cartoon

Page 27: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Ku Klux Klan members, 1866 Tennessee

Page 28: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 29: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Thomas Nast cartoon – Columbia is replacing the seceded states in the

Union “Let us have peace”

Page 30: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

“Reconstruction of the South” -- Federal generals leading towards peace

Page 31: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Thomas Nast cartoon shows freedmen as victims of Democratic Party

Page 32: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Edwin M. Stanton 1814-1869 - Lincoln’s Sec. of War, fired by Johnson - 1868

Page 33: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Impeachment Committee of the House [l to r] Benjamin Butler, James Wilson,

Thaddeus Stevens, George Boutwell, Thomas Williams, John Logan, John Bingham

Page 34: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

1868 Republican Convention in Chicago nominates Grant

Page 35: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Cartoon about carpetbagging

Page 36: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Frederick Douglass 1817-1895

Page 37: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

1873 election of Georgia Democrat John Brown Gordon 1832-1904 to

Senate was “Redemption” because he had been officer with Lee

Page 38: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Henry Clay Warmoth, 1842-1932 -- Carpetbagger governor of LA from 1868 - 1872

Page 39: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Thomas Nast cartoon “Solid South”

Page 40: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Horace Greeley 1811-1872 – founded NY Tribune in 1841, ran against Grant

in 1872 as a Liberal Republican and Democrat

Page 41: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Rutherford B. Hayes 1822-1893 – Ohio governor who became Republican

president in contested election of 1876

Page 42: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?
Page 43: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Painting of Electoral Commission of 1877 [Florida case]

Page 44: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?

Samuel J. Tilden 1814-1886 -- denied presidency when several southern

Democrats in Congress failed to support him in return for an end to Reconstruction

Page 45: Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy?