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From Appomattox to Reconstruction and Beyond. Developed by: Todd Goodwin Bob Jones Marilyn Zavorski Applewild School Fitchburg, MA. Fitchburg State College, Fitchburg, MA Teaching American History: Secession, Civil War and Reconstruction July 2005.
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From Appomattox to Reconstruction and Beyond Developed by: Todd Goodwin Bob Jones Marilyn Zavorski Applewild School Fitchburg, MA Fitchburg State College, Fitchburg, MA Teaching American History: Secession, Civil War and Reconstruction July 2005
Focus: Reconstruction and Redemption in the South, 1868-1877 The Legacy of the Civil War and Reconstruction
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The McLean family, who had moved from Manassas Junction after two major battles destroyed their farm in northeastern Virginia, started a new life in the quiet western Virginia town of Appomattox Court House. They still could not escape the war. On April 9, 1865 . . .
General Grant and General Lee meet in the McLean’s parlor to arrange the surrender of Lee’s army. Though there were a few last scattered battles in other places, historians consider this surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia the end of the Civil War.
Lee’s hungry men were allowed to return to their homes and farms to face an uncertain future.
There was jubilation in the North. http://www.wildwestweb.net/cwphotos.html
President Lincoln visited captured Richmond and was greeted as an emancipator by former slaves (Freedmen) and free blacks alike.
There were refugees all over the South, black . . . Black family finds safety among Federal soldiers. Historical photo: Library of Congress
The South lay in ruins from its transportation system . . .
to its economy and banking system, to its agricultural system,
to its few factories, and its churches and public buildings.
Ruins in Charleston, S.C.Photographer: George N. Barnard http://www.wildwestweb.net/cwphotos2.html
Richmond, VA - City ruins, looking east from the canal basin. Photographed after the city surrendered, April 3, 1865. Historical photo: Library of Congress
In Washington, D.C. people were thankful that the war was over and hopeful for Reconstruction. However, on Good Friday evening, 1865, at Ford’s Theater . . .
while watching the play, Our American Cousin, President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated. http://www.civilwarphotos.net/files/images/202.jpg
Washington, D.C. - John Wilkes Booth jumps from the presidential box after shooting President Lincoln at Ford's Theatre, April 14, 1865. Drawing: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, May 6, 1865
The nation mourned its slain leader. President Lincoln's funeral car.April 1865Photographer: Andrew J. Russell. http://www.wildwestweb.net/cwphotos2.html
John Wilkes Booth, Lincoln’s assassin, was killed resisting arrest in northern Virginia. His co-conspirators, such as this man Lewis Powell, who had attacked Secretary of State Seward, were rounded up and brought to trial.
In May of 1865 the Union Army came to Washington, D.C. for a grand review before returning home.
Infantry units passing on Pennsylvania Avenue near the Treasury. Grand Review of the Army. Washington, D.C., May 1865. Mathew Brady, Photographer (Library of Congress)
Washington, D.C. - Execution of four conspirators in Lincoln's assassination – Lewis T. Powell, Mary E. Suratt, David E. Herold and George A. Atzerodt. Original photo by Alexander Gardner. Historical photo: Library of Congress
Meanwhile Reconstruction was under way with thousands of southerners swearing allegiance to the Union.
The country debated what was to become of the former slaves called Freedman. “Franchise, And Not This Man?” Harper’s Weekly. August 5, 1865, p. 489
Under Congressional Reconstruction the Freedmen were given the right to vote in the South. “The First Vote” Harper’s Weekly November 16, 1867
However, some southerners had other ideas for the Freedmen. http://americanhistory.si.edu/brown/history/1-segregated/images/early-kkk-l.jpg
Harper’s Weekly 1874 http://edusolution.com/myclassroom/classnotes/reconstruction/USAkkk.jpg
After Reconstruction ended in 1877, many whites sought a return to pre-Civil War social structures. Under the Jim Crow system Freedmen lost many rights, such as suffrage, and they were forced into low-paying jobs, such as tenant farming and sharecropping. In effect they were treated as second-class citizens. . . http://www.literacyrules.com/jim_crow2.htm
or worse! http://instruct.westvalley.edu/kelly/Distance_Learning/History_17B/Lecture02/Lecture02_p04.htm
July 26, 2005 Tuesday, July 26, 2005 Click on the image below to view USA Today’s 1946 lynchings re-enacted. X Close the website and advance this slide show with the arrow key.
This discrimination and segregation continued into the 1950’s and 1960’s. The Civil Rights Movement resumed the quest for freedom and equality begun during Reconstruction.
Rosa Parks’ civil disobedience triggered the Montgomery, AL, bus boycott.
Image credits Miller, Francis Trevelyan, ed., Photographic History of the Civil War, 10 volumes, Springfield, MA: Patriot Publishing, 1911. (brown-tint images) Civil War ClipArt CD by Finley-Holiday Film Corp., Whittier, CA Civil War Picture CD by Finley-Holiday Film Corp., Whittier, CA http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/brady-photos/ http://www.civil-war.net/ excellent http://civilwarclipart.com/Clipartgallery/clipart1.htm http://www.civilwarphotos.net/files/images/202.jpg excellent http://classroomclipart.com/ http://216.247.171.108/Clipartgallery/illus.html http://instruct.westvalley.edu/kelly/Distance_Learning/History_17B/Lecture02/Lecture02_p04.htm http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/list/085_disc.html excellent: Civil Rights http://www.mdhs.org/library/Z24CivilWar.html excellent http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/civilrights/learn_more.html#reconstruction excellent: Slavery to Civil rights http://www.wildwestweb.net/cwphotos.html http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwphtml/cwphome.html http://www.tennessee-scv.org/Camp1513/clipart.htm http://www.wisegorilla.com/images/civilwar/civilwar.html These websites may be opened by clicking on them. Press Esc to end program