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Chapter 17: Assassination and Reconstruction. Chapter Focus Questions. What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy? How difficult was the transition from slavery to freedom for African Americans?
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Chapter Focus Questions • What were the competing political plans for reconstructing the defeated Confederacy? • How difficult was the transition from slavery to freedom for African Americans? • What was the political and social legacy of Reconstruction in the southern states? • What were the post-Civil War transformations in the economic and political life of the North?
Ford’s Theater – Lincoln assassinated while watching Our American Cousin
Artist’s portrayal of assassination – “sic semper tyrannis” [Thus always to tyrants]
Reward poster for the conspirators – Booth trapped two weeks later in a VA barn
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
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”]
Andrew Johnson 1808-1875 – pardoned 13,000 former Confederates, impeached but found not guilty by one vote
Senator Charles Sumner of MA -- a chief architect of Congressional Reconstruction
Rep. Thaddeus Stevens 1792-1868 – helped secure Civil Rights Act of 1866, helped draft 14th Amendment, Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
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
Sen. Blanche Kelso Bruce, Mississippi elected in 1874, Oberlin graduate
Primary school for Vicksburg freemen – Freedmen’s Bureau established March 3, 1865
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
Thomas Nast cartoon – Columbia is replacing the seceded states in the Union “Let us have peace”
“Reconstruction of the South” -- Federal generals leading towards peace
Thomas Nast cartoon shows freedmen as victims of Democratic Party
Edwin M. Stanton 1814-1869 - Lincoln’s Sec. of War, fired by Johnson - 1868
Impeachment Committee of the House [l to r] Benjamin Butler, James Wilson, Thaddeus Stevens, George Boutwell, Thomas Williams, John Logan, John Bingham
1873 election of Georgia Democrat John Brown Gordon 1832-1904 to Senate was “Redemption” because he had been officer with Lee
Henry Clay Warmoth, 1842-1932 -- Carpetbagger governor of LA from 1868 - 1872
Horace Greeley 1811-1872 – founded NY Tribune in 1841, ran against Grant in 1872 as a Liberal Republican and Democrat
Rutherford B. Hayes 1822-1893 – Ohio governor who became Republican president in contested election of 1876
Samuel J. Tilden 1814-1886 -- denied presidency when several southern Democrats in Congress failed to support him in return for an end to Reconstruction