Dictionary Definition
reconstruct
Verb
2 build again; "The house was rebuild after it
was hit by a bomb" [syn: rebuild]
3 cause somebody to adapt or reform socially or
politically
4 return to its original or usable and
functioning condition; "restore the forest to its original pristine
condition" [syn: restore]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
- To construct again; to restore.
- In U.S. English this word has strong connotations of the Reconstruction after the U.S. Civil War, the effort (1865-1876) to create a new, more racially egalitarian order in the U.S. South.
Translations
To construct again
- Finnish: jälleenrakentaa, rakentaa uudelleen; (to restore) rekonstruoida (e.g. an item, by using an archeological relic as a model)
Extensive Definition
In the
history of the United
States, "Reconstruction" refers to the period between 1863 or
1865 and 1877 when the
federal government focused on resolving the consequences and
aftermath of the American
Civil War (1861–1865). It is also the common name for
the general history of the post-Civil War era in the former
Confederacy between 1865 and 1877. The start of the period is
often dated to the capitulation of the Confederacy in 1865, shortly after
which the practice of
slavery was brought to an end. Some historians, however, date
its beginning to 1863, the year of the
Emancipation
Proclamation.
Reconstruction addressed how secessionist Southern
states would return to the
Union, the civil status of the leaders of the Confederacy, and
the Constitutional
and legal status of the Negro Freedmen. After
the Civil War, violent controversy erupted throughout the South
over how to tackle such issues.
The constitutional amendments and legislative
reforms that laid the foundation for the most radical phase of
Reconstruction were enacted from 1865 until 1871. By the 1870s,
Reconstruction had made some progress in providing the Freedmen
with equal rights under the law, and Freedmen were voting and
taking political office. Republican legislatures, coalitions of
whites and blacks, established the first systems of public school
systems in the South. Beginning in 1874, however, there was a rise
in white paramilitary
organizations, such as the White League
and Red
Shirts, whose political aim was to turn out the Republicans.
They also disrupted organizing and terrorized blacks to bar them
from the polls. From 1873 to 1877, conservative white Democrats
(calling themselves "Redeemers")
regained power in state elections throughout the former
Confederacy. Several states kept constitutions rewritten during
Reconstruction years for many years. Others used separate
legislation to overturn some Reconstruction progress.
In 1877 President
Rutherford
Hayes withdrew federal troops, causing the collapse of the
remaining three Republican state governments. Through the enactment
of
disfranchising statutes and constitutions, and extralegal
means, the white Democrats subsequently removed most blacks and
hundreds of thousands of poor whites from voter rolls in every
Southern state. White Democrats established one-party
rule and enforced a system of racial
segregation that continued throughout the South into the
1960s.
Bitterness from the heated partisanship of the
era lasted into the 20th century. But in other ways whites in the
North and South undertook reconciliation, which reached a height in
the early 20th century. This reconciliation coincided with the
nadir of American race relations, during which there was an
increase of racial
segregation throughout America,
disfranchisement of most African-Americans in the South, and
racial violence, especially in the South. The
13th,
14th, and
15th amendments were constitutional legacies of the Radical
period. These amendments established the rights on which African
Americans, poor whites and their allies based extensive litigation,
leading to US Supreme
Court rulings starting in the early 20th century that struck
down disfranchising provisions, civil rights legislation that was
enacted in the mid-1960s, and additional constitutional amendments
protecting and expanding the franchise.
The Phases of Reconstruction
Reconstruction came in three phases. Presidential Reconstruction, 1863-1866 was controlled by Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, with the goal of quickly reuniting the country. It can be said to have begun with the Emancipation Proclamation. The programs proposed by Lincoln and subsequently by Johnson (who by late 1865 had lost the support of most of the Republican party) were opposed by the Radical Republicans. This political faction gained power after the 1866 elections and began Congressional Reconstruction, 1866-1873 emphasizing civil rights and voting rights for the freedmen.Supported by the Military Reconstruction Act of
1867, in 1868 new state governments came to power in the former
Confederacy which were based on a Republican coalition of freedmen,
carpetbaggers and
scalawags. In the
Redemption, 1873-1877, white Southern Democrats (calling themselves
"Redeemers") defeated the Republicans and took control of each
southern state, marking the end of Reconstruction. In 1877,
President Rutherford
Hayes withdrew federal troops, causing the collapse of the
remaining three Republican state governments.
1863-1866: The Problem of Restoring the South to the Union
During the Civil War, Republican leaders agreed that slavery and the Slave Power had to be permanently destroyed, and that all forms of Confederate nationalism had to be suppressed. Moderates said this could be easily accomplished as soon as Confederate armies surrendered and the Southern states repealed secession and ratified the 13th Amendment—all of which happened by September 1865.President Abraham Lincoln was the leader of the
moderate Republicans and wanted to speed up Reconstruction and
reunite the nation as painlessly and as quickly as possible.
Lincoln formally began Reconstruction in late 1863 with his
Ten
percent plan, which went into operation in several states but
which Radicals opposed. Lincoln pocket vetoed the Radical plan, the
Wade-Davis
Bill of 1864, which was much more strict than the Ten-Percent
Plan. The opposing faction of Radical
Republicans were skeptical of Southern intentions and demanded
more stringent federal action. Congressman Thaddeus
Stevens and Senator Charles
Sumner led the Radical Republicans.
Radical
Republican Charles
Sumner argued that secession had destroyed statehood alone but
the Constitution still extended its authority and its protection
over individuals, as in the territories. Thaddeus
Stevens and his followers viewed secession as having left the
states in a status like newly conquered territory.
After
Lincoln's assassination in April 1865, President Andrew Johnson
switched from the Radical to the moderate camp. By 1866, however,
Johnson, with no party affiliation, broke with the moderate
Republicans and aligned himself more with the Democrats who opposed
equality and the
Fourteenth Amendment granting citizenship to former slaves.
Radicals attacked the policies of Johnson, especially his veto of
the
Civil Rights Act of 1866, which was intended to protect the
civil rights of freedmen.
Congress rejected Johnson's argument that he had
the war power to decide what to do, since the war was over.
Congress decided it had the primary authority to decide on how
Reconstruction should proceed because the Constitution stated
Congress had to guarantee each state a republican form of
government. The issue became how
republicanism should operate in the South; that is, how the
freedmen would achieve citizenship, what the status of the
Confederate states should be, and what should be the status of men
who had supported the Confederacy.
The
election of 1866 decisively changed the balance of power,
giving the Republicans control of Congress
and enough votes to overcome Johnson's vetoes. They moved to
impeach Johnson because of his opposition to Congressional
policies. Johnson was acquitted by one vote, but he lost the
influence to determine much Reconstruction policy.
Republicans established military districts in the
South and used Army
personnel to administer the region until new governments loyal to
the Union could be established. They granted citizenship and
suffrage to former slaves. They temporarily suspended the franchise
for the estimated 10,000 to 15,000 white men who had been
Confederate officials or senior officers.
With the power to vote, freedmen started
participating in politics. A Republican coalition of freedmen,
southerners supportive of the Union, called scalawags; and northerners who
had migrated to the South (some who were returning natives, but
most were Union veterans), snidely called carpetbaggers, organized to
create constitutional conventions. They created new state
constitutions to implement changes affecting former slaves.
Loyalty issue
A loyalty issue emerged in the debates over the Wade-Davis Bill of 1864. Wade-Davis required voters to take the "Ironclad Oath," swearing that in the past they never had supported the Confederacy or been one of its soldiers. Lincoln ignored the past and asked voters to swear that in the future they would support the Union. The Radicals lost support following Lincoln's pocket veto, but they regained strength after Lincoln's assassination in April 1865.Suffrage issue
Congress had to consider how to bring southern states back into the Union. Suffrage for ex-Confederates was one of two main concerns. First, both sides tried to keep the other from voting. It was a question of whether to allow some or all ex-Confederates to vote. The moderates wanted virtually all of them to vote, but the Radicals repeatedly tried to impose the Ironclad oath, which would allow none to vote. Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania proposed, unsuccessfully, that all ex-Confederates lose the right to vote for five years. The compromise that was reached disfranchised many ex-Confederate civil and military leaders for a limited period. No one knew how many temporarily lost the vote, but one estimate was 10,000 to 15,000.Second (and closely related to discussions about
disfranchising ex-Confederates) was the issue of whether freedmen
should be allowed to vote. The issue was how to receive the four
million former slaves as citizens. If they were to be fully counted
as citizens, some sort of representation for apportionment of seats
in Congress had to be determined. The population of enslaved
African Americans had been counted as three-fifths of a comparable
number of free whites. If the freedmen could not vote, the South
would gain additional seats in Congress by having the benefit of
four million "new" citizens counted toward representation, but with
only whites representing them. Many conservatives (including most
white southerners, northern Democrats, and some northern
Republicans) opposed black voting. (Some northern states that had
referendums on the subject about the same time limited the ability
of their own small populations of blacks to vote. That was not the
same issue as Congress faced with the South.)
Lincoln had supported a middle position to allow
some black men to vote, especially army veterans. Johnson also
believed that such service should be rewarded with citizenship.
Lincoln proposed giving the vote to "the very intelligent, and
especially those who have fought gallantly in our ranks." In 1864,
Governor Johnson said, "The better class of them will go to work
and sustain themselves, and that class ought to be allowed to vote,
on the ground that a loyal negro is more worthy than a disloyal
white man." As President in 1865, Johnson wrote to the man he
appointed as governor of Mississippi,
recommending, "If you could extend the elective franchise to all
persons of color who can read the Constitution in English and write
their names, and to all persons of color who own real estate valued
at not less than two hundred and fifty dollars, and pay taxes
thereon, you would completely disarm the adversary [Radicals in
Congress], and set an example the other states will follow."
Senators Charles Sumner of Massachusetts
and Thaddeus Stevens, leaders of the Radical Republicans, were
initially hesitant to enfranchise the largely illiterate ex-slave
population. Sumner preferred at first impartial requirements that
would have imposed literacy restrictions on both blacks and whites.
He believed, however, that he would not succeed in passing
legislation to disfranchise illiterate whites who already had the
vote.
(Oddly enough, southern states did precisely that
themselves with new constitutions and statutes from 1890-1908.
Anxious not to have to contend again with coalitions between poor
whites and blacks as arose in the 1890s, Democrats disfranchised
both in most southern states. In Alabama, for instance, they
reduced the franchise for poor whites, whereas the state had been
established with universal white suffrage in 1819. From 1900-1903
the white vote went down by more than 40,000, although the
population increased. By 1941, 600,000 poor whites in Alabama had
been disfranchised, compared to 520,000 blacks.)
Because there was no universal public education
in the South, many poor whites were illiterate. In 1880, for
example, the white illiteracy rate was about 25% in Tennessee,
Kentucky, Alabama, South Carolina, and Georgia; and as high as 33%
in North Carolina. This compares with the 9% national rate and a
black rate of illiteracy that was over 70% in the South. By 1900,
with emphasis within the black community on education, however, the
majority of blacks had achieved literacy.
Sumner soon concluded that "there was no
substantial protection for the freedman except in the franchise."
This was necessary, he stated, "(1) For his own protection; (2) For
the protection of the white Unionist; and (3) For the peace of the
country. We put the musket in his hands because it was necessary;
for the same reason we must give him the franchise." The support
for voting rights was a compromise between moderate and Radical
Republicans. The Republicans believed that the best way for men to
get political experience was to be able to vote and to participate
in the political system. They passed laws allowing all male
freedmen to vote. In 1867, black men voted for the first time. Over
the course of Reconstruction, more than
1,500 African Americans held public office in the South. They
did not hold office in numbers representative of their proportion
in the population, but often elected whites to represent them. (The
question of women's
suffrage was also debated but was rejected.)
Johnson's presidential reconstruction: 1865–66
Northern anger over the assassination of Lincoln and the immense human cost of the war led to demands for harsh policies. Vice President Andrew Johnson had taken a hard line and spoke of hanging rebel Confederates, but when he succeeded Lincoln as President, Johnson took a much softer line, pardoning many Confederate leaders and ex-Confederates to maintain their control of Southern state governments, Southern lands, and black people. Jefferson Davis was held in prison for two years, but other Confederate leaders were not. There were no treason trials. Only one person—Captain Henry Wirz, the commandant of the prison camp in Andersonville, Georgia—was executed for war crimes.In March 1865, Congress had established the
Freedmen's
Bureau. The Bureau provided food, clothing, and fuel to
destitute former slaves and white refugees. It did not, as later
myths said, promise 40
acres and a mule.
Although resigned to the abolition of slavery,
many ex-Confederates were not willing to accept the granting of
civil rights to the freedmen. The defeated feared that after the
abolition of slavery, the freedmen would threaten their economic
and political preeminence in the South. In the words of Benjamin F.
Perry, president Johnson's choice as the provisional governor of
South Carolina: "First, the Negro is to be invested with all
political power, and then the antagonism of interest between
capital and labor is to work out the result."
However, the fears of the mostly conservative
planter elite were partly assuaged by the actions of president
Johnson, who ensured that a wholesale land redistribution from the
planters to the Freedman did not occur. President Johnson ordered
that confiscated or abandoned lands administered by the Freedman's
Bureau would not be redistributed to the freedmen but be returned
to the pardoned owners. Land was returned that would have been
forfeited under the provisions of the Confiscation
Acts passed by Congress in 1861 and 1862.
The position of the Freedmen in 1865-66 and the enactment of Black Codes
Southern state governments quickly enacted the restrictive "black codes". However they were abolished by Congress and seldom had effect because the Freedman's Bureau (not the local courts) handled the legal affairs of freedmen. The Black Codes were based on northern vagrancy laws.Under the black codes, the freedmen had more
rights than did free blacks before the war, but they still had only
a limited set of second-class civil rights, no voting rights, and
their rights as citizens such as owning firearms, serving in a jury
when no black was present in the case, and moving about the
countryside without employment were prohibited. Among other
provisions, the Black Codes stringently limited blacks' ability to
control their own employment. The Black Codes outraged northern
opinion. They were overthrown by the
Civil Rights Act of 1866 that gave the Freedmen full legal
equality (except for the right to vote).
The freedmen rejected gang labor procedures that
had been used in slavery and with the strong backing of the
Freedman's Bureau they forced planters to bargain for their labor.
Such bargaining led to the establishment of the system of sharecropping, which gave
the freedmen greater economic independence and social autonomy than
gang labor. However, because they lacked capital and the planters
continued to own the means of production (tools, draft animals and
land), the freedmen were forced into producing cash crops (mainly
cotton) for the planters, and they entered into a crop-lien
system which eventually led to the permanent indebtedness of
the majority of the freedmen.To pay off their debt, some
freedpeople would even be auctioned off as servants.
Northern officials gave varying reports on
conditions for the Freedmen in the South. One harsh assessment came
from Carl
Schurz who reported on the situation in the states along the
Gulf Coast. His report (available here)
documents dozens of extra-judicial
killings and claims that hundreds or thousands more African
Americans were killed:
The number of murders and assaults perpetrated
upon Negroes is very great; we can form only an approximative
estimate of what is going on in those parts of the South which are
not closely garrisoned, and from which no regular reports are
received, by what occurs under the very eyes of our military
authorities. As to my personal experience, I will only mention that
during my two days sojourn at Atlanta, one Negro was stabbed with
fatal effect on the street, and three were poisoned, one of whom
died. While I was at Montgomery, one negro was cut across the
throat evidently with intent to kill, and another was shot, but
both escaped with their lives. Several papers attached to this
report give an account of the number of capital cases that occurred
at certain places during a certain period of time. It is a sad fact
that the perpetration of those acts is not confined to that class
of people which might be called the rabble.
Carl Schurz, "Report on the Condition of the
South," December 1865 (U.S. Senate Exec. Doc. No. 2, 39th Congress,
1st session).
The report includes sworn testimony from soldiers
and officials of the Freedman's Bureau. In Selma, Alabama, Major
J.P. Houston noted that whites who killed 12 African Americans in
his district never came to trial. Many more killings never even
became official cases. Captain Poillon describes white patrols in
southwestern Alabama "who board some of the boats; after the boats
leave they hang, shoot, or drown the victims they may find on them,
and all those found on the roads or coming down the rivers are
almost invariably murdered. The bewildered and terrified freedmen
know not what to do--to leave is death; to remain is to suffer the
increased burden imposed upon them by the cruel taskmaster, whose
only interest is their labor, wrung from them by every device an
inhuman ingenuity can devise; hence the lash and murder is resorted
to intimidate those whom fear of an awful death alone cause to
remain, while patrols, Negro dogs and spies, disguised as Yankees,
keep constant guard over these unfortunate people."
Moderate responses
In response to the Black codes and worrisome signs of Southern recalcitrance, the Radical Republicans blocked the readmission of the ex-rebellious states to the Congress in fall 1865. Congress also renewed the Freedman's Bureau, but Johnson vetoed the Freedmen's Bureau Bill in February 1866. Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois, leader of the moderate Republicans, took affront at the black codes. He proposed the first Civil Rights Law, because the abolition of slavery was empty if "laws are to be enacted and enforced depriving persons of African descent of privileges which are essential to freemen... A law that does not allow a colored person to go from one county to another, and one that does not allow him to hold property, to teach, to preach, are certainly laws in violation of the rights of a freeman... The purpose of this bill is to destroy all these discriminations."The key to the bill was the opening
section:
- "All persons born in the United States ... are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States; and such citizens of every race and color, without regard to any previous condition of slavery ... shall have the same right in every State ...to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property, as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to like punishment, pains, and penalties and to none other, any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or custom to the Contrary notwithstanding."
Congress quickly passed the Civil Rights bill;
the Senate on February 2
voted 33–12; the House on March 13 voted
111–38.
Johnson vetoes; Republicans rally against him
Although strongly urged by moderates in Congress to sign the Civil Rights bill, Johnson broke decisively with them by vetoing it on March 27. His veto message objected to the measure because it conferred citizenship on the Freedmen at a time when eleven out of thirty-six states were unrepresented and attempted to fix by Federal law "a perfect equality of the white and black races in every State of the Union." Johnson said it was an invasion by Federal authority of the rights of the States; it had no warrant in the Constitution and was contrary to all precedents. It was a "stride toward centralization and the concentration of all legislative power in the national government."The Democratic Party, proclaiming itself the
party of white men, north and south, supported Johnson. However the
Republicans in Congress overrode his veto (the Senate by the close
vote of 33:15, the House by 122:41) and the Civil Rights bill
became law. Congress also passed the Freedmen's Bureau Bill over
Johnson's veto.
The last moderate proposal was the
Fourteenth Amendment, whose principal drafter was
Representative John
Bingham. It was designed to put the key provisions of the Civil
Rights Act into the Constitution, but it went much further. It
extended citizenship to everyone born in the United States (except
visitors and
Indians on reservations), penalized states that did not give
the vote to Freedmen, and most importantly, created new federal
civil rights that could be protected by federal courts. It
guaranteed the Federal war debt would be paid (and promised the
Confederate debt would never be paid). Johnson used his influence
to block the amendment in the states since three-fourths of the
states were required for ratification. (The amendment was later
ratified.) The moderate effort to compromise with Johnson had
failed, and a political fight broke out between the Republicans
(both Radical and moderate) on one side, and on the other side,
Johnson and his allies in the Democratic party in the North, and
the conservative groupings (which used different names) in each
southern state.
Congress imposes Radical Reconstruction: 1866–73
Republicans in Congress took control of Reconstruction policies after the election of 1866. They passed legislation over President Johnson's vetoes. They passed constitutional amendments against his wishes. Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner, and the Republican faction that called themselves "radicals" led efforts to extend suffrage to freedmen. They were generally in control, although they had to compromise with the moderate Republicans. (The Democrats in Congress had almost no power.) Historians generally refer to this period as Radical Reconstruction.The South's white leaders, who regained power in
the immediate postwar era before the vote was granted to the
freedmen, renounced secession and slavery, but not white supremacy.
People who had previously held power were angered in 1867 when new
elections were held. New Republican lawmakers were elected by a
coalition of white Unionists, freedmen and northerners who had
settled in the South. Some leaders in the South tried to
accommodate new conditions.
Constitutional amendments
Three new Constitutional amendments were adopted. The 13th Amendment abolished slavery and was ratified in 1865. The 14th Amendment was rejected in 1866 but ratified in 1868, guaranteeing citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, except Native Americans, and granting them federal civil rights. The 15th Amendment passed in 1870, decreeing that the right to vote could not be denied because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The amendment did not declare the vote an unconditional right and only prohibited these specific types of discrimination while specific electoral policies were determined within each state.Statutes
Congress clarified the scope of the federal writ of habeas corpus to allow federal courts to vacate unlawful state court convictions or sentences in 1867 (28 U.S.C. § 2254).Military reconstruction
With the Radicals in control, Congress passed the Reconstruction Acts in 1867. The first Reconstruction Act placed ten Confederate states under military control, grouping them into five military districts:- First Military District: Virginia, under General John Schofield
- Second Military District: The Carolinas, under General Daniel Sickles
- Third Military District: Georgia, Alabama and Florida, under General John Pope
- Fourth Military District: Arkansas and Mississippi, under General Edward Ord
- Fifth Military District: Texas and Louisiana, under Generals Philip Sheridan and Winfield Scott Hancock
Tennessee was not made part of a military
district (having already been readmitted to the Union), and
therefore federal controls did not apply.
The ten Southern state governments were
re-constituted under the direct control of the United
States Army. One major purpose was to recognize and protect the
right of African Americans to vote. There was little or no
fighting, but rather a state of martial law
in which the military closely supervised local government,
supervised elections, and tried to protect office holders and
freedmen from violence. Blacks were enrolled as voters; former
Confederate leaders were excluded for a limited period.[Foner 1988
p 274–5] No one state was entirely representative. Randolph
Campbell describes what happened in Texas:
- The first critical step … was the registration of voters according to guidelines established by Congress and interpreted by Generals Sheridan and Griffin. The Reconstruction Acts called for registering all adult males, white and black, except those who had ever sworn an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States and then engaged in rebellion.… Sheridan interpreted these restrictions stringently, barring from registration not only all pre-1861 officials of state and local governments who had supported the Confederacy but also all city officeholders and even minor functionaries such as sextons of cemeteries. In May Griffin … appointed a three-man board of registrars for each county, making his choices on the advice of known scalawags and local Freedman's Bureau agents. In every county where practicable a freedman served as one of the three registrars.… Final registration amounted to approximately 59,633 whites and 49,479 blacks. It is impossible to say how many whites were rejected or refused to register (estimates vary from 7,500 to 12,000), but blacks, who constituted only about 30 percent of the state's population, were significantly overrepresented at 45 percent of all voters.
Re-admission to representation in Congress
African American officeholders
Republicans took control of all Southern state governorships and state legislatures, leading to the election of numerous African-Americans to state and national offices, as well as to the installation of African-Americans into other positions of power. About 137 black officeholders had lived outside the South before the Civil War. Some had escaped from slavery to the North and returned to help the South advance in the postwar era. Many of them had achieved education and positions of leadership elsewhere. Other African American men who served were leaders in their communities, including a number of preachers. As was the case in white communities, all leadership did not depend on wealth and literacy. Source: Rhodes (1920) v 6 p. 199; no report on ArkansasThere were very few African Americans elected or
appointed to national office. African Americans voted for white
candidates as well as for blacks. The Fifteenth
Amendment guaranteed the right to vote, but did not guarantee
that the vote would be counted or the districts would be
apportioned equally. As a result, even states with majority African
American population often only had one or two African American
representatives in Congress, with the exception of South Carolina.
At the end of Reconstruction, four of its five Congressmen were
African American.
Public schools
W.E.B. Du Bois was one of the first historians to document the freedmen's deep commitment to education and demonstrated that African Americans played a critical role in establishing universal public education as fundamental to southern state constitutions during congressional Reconstruction. Many slaves had taken risks to learn to read although forbidden to do so by law; African Americans started "native schools" before the end of the war; Sabbath schools were another widespread means freedmen created for teaching literacy. When they gained suffrage, black politicians took this commitment to public education to state constitutional conventions.African Americans and white Republicans joined to
build education at the state level. They created a system of public
schools, which were segregated by race everywhere except New Orleans.
Most blacks approved the segregated schools because they wanted to
control education for their children, the schools provided jobs for
black teachers, and kept their children in a much safer learning
environment. In general, elementary and a few secondary schools
were built in the cities. But the South had relatively few
cities.
In the rural areas the public school was often a
one-room affair that attracted about half the younger children. The
teachers were poorly paid, and their pay was often in arrears.
Conservatives contended the rural schools were too expensive and
unnecessary for a region where the vast majority of people were
cotton or tobacco farmers. They had no vision of a better future
for their residents. One historian found that the schools were less
effective than they might have been because of "poverty, the
inability of the states to collect taxes, and inefficiency and
corruption in many places prevented successful operation of the
schools."
Numerous private academies and colleges for
Freedmen were established by northern missionaries. Every state
created state colleges for Freedmen, such as Alcorn
State University in Mississippi. The state colleges created
generations of teachers who were critical in the education of
African American children.
In 1890, the black state colleges started
receiving federal funds as land grant schools. They received state
funds after Reconstruction ended because, as Lynch explains, "there
are very many liberal, fair-minded and influential Democrats in the
State who are strongly in favor of having the State provide for the
liberal education of both races."Before this period, however,
planters had opposed public education for freedmen and underfunded
schools.
Railroad subsidies and payoffs
Every Southern state subsidized railroads, which modernizers felt could haul the South out of isolation and poverty. Millions of dollars in bonds and subsidies were fraudulently pocketed. One ring in North Carolina spent $200,000 in bribing the legislature and obtained millions in state money for its railroads. Instead of building new track, however, it used the funds to speculate in bonds, reward friends with extravagant fees, and enjoy lavish trips to Europe. Taxes were quadrupled across the South to pay off the railroad bonds and the school costs. There were complaints among taxpayers, because taxes had historically been very low, since there was so little commitment to public works or public education. Taxes historically had been much lower than in the North, reflecting a lack of public investment in the communities. Nevertheless thousands of miles of lines were built as the Southern system expanded from 11,000 miles (17,700 km) in 1870 to 29,000 miles (46,700 km) in 1890. The lines were owned and directed overwhelmingly by Northerners. Railroads helped create a mechanically skilled group of craftsmen and indeed broke the isolation of much of the region. Passengers were few, however, and apart from hauling the cotton crop when it was harvested, there was little freight traffic. As Franklin explains, "numerous railroads fed at the public trough by bribing legislators...and through the use and misuse of state funds." The effect, according to one businessman, "was to drive capital from the State, paralyze industry, and demoralize labor."Taxation during Reconstruction
Reconstruction changed the tax structure of the South. In the U.S. from the earliest days until today, a major source of state revenue was the property tax. In the South, wealthy landowners were allowed to assess the value of their own land. These assessments were almost valueless and the pre-war tax rate was almost nothing. Pre-war southern states did not educate their citizens or build and maintain any infrastructure. State revenues came from fees and from sales taxes on slave auctions. Some states assessed property owners by a combination of land value and a capitation tax, a tax on each worker employed. This tax was often assessed in a way to discourage a free labor market, where a slave was assessed at 75 cents, while a free white was assessed at a dollar or more, and a free African American at $3 or more. Some revenue also came from poll taxes. These taxes were more than poor people could pay, with the designed and inevitable consequence that they did not vote.During Reconstruction, new spending on schools
and infrastructure, combined with fraudulent spending and a
collapse in state credit because of huge deficits, forced the
states to dramatically increase property tax rates. In places, the
rate went up to ten times higher—despite the poverty of
the region. The infrastructure of much of the South--roads,
bridges, and railroads--scarce and deficient as it was--had been
destroyed during the war. In part, the new tax system was designed
to force owners of large estates with huge tracts of uncultivated
land either to sell or to have it confiscated for failure to pay
taxes. The taxes would serve as a market-based system for
redistributing the land to the landless freedmen and white
poor.
Here is a table of property tax rates for South
Carolina and Mississippi. Note that many local town and county
assessments effectively doubled the tax rates reported in the
table. These taxes were still levied upon the landowners' own sworn
testimony as to the value of their land, which remained the dubious
and exploitable system used by wealthy landholders in the South
well into the 20th century.
Now that they were called upon to pay a tax on
their property, angry plantation owners revolted, and the
conservatives shifted their focus away from race to taxes. Former
Congressman John Lynch, a black Republican leader from Mississippi,
concluded, "The argument made by the taxpayers, however, was
plausible and it may be conceded that, upon the whole, they were
about right; for no doubt it would have been much easier upon the
taxpayers to have increased at that time the interest-bearing debt
of the State than to have increased the tax rate. The latter
course, however, had been adopted and could not then be
changed."
Views of conservatives in the South
The white Southerners who lost power reformed themselves into "Conservative" parties that battled the Republicans throughout the South. The party names varied, but by the late 1870s, they simply called themselves "Democrats." Historian Walter Lynwood Fleming describes mounting anger of Southern whites: "The Negro troops, even at their best, were everywhere considered offensive by the native whites... The Negro soldier, impudent by reason of his new freedom, his new uniform, and his new gun, was more than Southern temper could tranquilly bear, and race conflicts were frequent."While both the planter-business class and the
common farmer class of the South both opposed black suffrage, they
did so for different reasons. These common farmers were now
competing economically with the recently freed blacks and wanted to
keep them inferior. They opposed black suffrage for racial reasons.
On the other hand, the planter-business class opposed black
suffrage for economic reasons, not racial reasons. Any laboring
class, no matter what race, given universal suffrage could lead to
an attack on the property that the planter class loved so much.
These conservatives felt that their property interests were now in
danger because the laboring class was ignorant and would vote to
raise taxes significantly. After being faced by these taxes, the
planter-business class that by teaming up with the blacks they
could lift the tariffs and further their own political agendas. The
Democrats nominated blacks for political office as well as tried to
steal other blacks from the Republican side. But when these
attempts to combine with the blacks failed, the planters joined the
common farmers in simply trying to displace the Republican
governments. ."
Fleming is a typical example of the conservative
pro-white interpretation of Reconstruction. His work defended some
roles of the KKK but denounced its violence; Fleming accepted as
necessary the disenfranchisement of African Americans because he
thought their votes were bought and sold. Fleming described the
first results of the movement as "good" and the later ones as "both
good and bad." According to Fleming (1907) the KKK "quieted the
Negroes, made life and property safer, gave protection to women,
stopped burnings, forced the Radical leaders to be more moderate,
made the Negroes work better, drove the worst of the Radical
leaders from the country and started the whites on the way to gain
political supremacy." The evil results, Fleming said, was that
lawless elements "made use of the organization as a cloak to cover
their misdeeds... the lynching habits of today [1907] are largely
to conditions, social and legal, growing out of
Reconstruction."
Ellis
Oberholtzer (a northern scholar) in 1917 explained:
- Outrages upon the ex-slaves in the South there were in plenty. Their sufferings were many. But white men, too, were victims of lawless violence, and in all portions of the North as well as in the late "rebel" states. Not a political campaign passed without the exchange of bullets, the breaking of skulls with sticks and stones, the firing of rival club-houses. Republican clubs marched the streets of Philadelphia, amid revolver shots and brickbats, to save the negroes from the "rebel" savages in Alabama... The project to make voters out of black men was not so much for their social elevation as for the further punishment of the Southern white people—for the capture of offices for Radical scamps and the entrenchment of the Radical party in power for a long time to come in the South and in the country at large."
Reaction by conservatives included the formation
of violent secret societies, especially the Ku Klux Klan. Violence
occurred in cities and in the countryside between white former
Confederates, Republicans, African-Americans, representatives of
the federal government, and Republican-organized armed Loyal
Leagues. The victims of violence were overwhelmingly African
Americans, although white supporters were also attacked.
Redemption 1873-77
Republicans split nationally: Election of 1872
As early as 1868 Supreme Court Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, a leading Radical during the war, concluded that:- "Congress was right in not limiting, by its reconstruction acts, the right of suffrage to whites; but wrong in the exclusion from suffrage of certain classes of citizens and all unable to take its prescribed retrospective oath, and wrong also in the establishment of despotic military governments for the States and in authorizing military commissions for the trial of civilians in time of peace. There should have been as little military government as possible; no military commissions; no classes excluded from suffrage; and no oath except one of faithful obedience and support to the Constitution and laws, and of sincere attachment to the constitutional Government of the United States."
By 1872, President Grant had alienated large
numbers of leading Republicans, including many Radicals by the
corruption of his administration and his use of federal soldiers to
prop up Radical state regimes in the South. The opponents, called
"Liberal Republicans", included founders of the party who
expressed dismay that the party had succumbed to corruption. They
were further wearied by the continued insurgent violence of whites
against blacks in the South, especially around every election
cycle, which demonstrated the war was not over and changes were
fragile . Leaders included editors of some of the nation's most
powerful newspapers. Charles
Sumner, embittered by the corruption of the Grant
administration, joined the new party, which nominated editor
Horace
Greeley. The badly organized Democratic party also supported
Greeley.
Grant made up for the defections by new gains
among Union veterans, as well as strong support from the "Stalwart"
faction of his party (which depended on his patronage), and the
Southern Republican parties. Grant won a smashing landslide, as the
Liberal Republican party vanished and many former
supporters—even ex-abolitionists—abandoned the
cause of Reconstruction.
Republican coalition splinters in South
In the South, political–racial tensions built up inside the Republican party. In 1868, Georgia Democrats, with support from some Republicans, expelled all 28 black Republican members (arguing blacks were eligible to vote but not to hold office.) In several states the more conservative scalawags fought for control with the more radical carpetbaggers and usually lost. Thus, in Mississippi, the conservative faction led by scalawag James Lusk Alcorn was decisively defeated by the radical faction led by carpetbagger Adelbert Ames. The party lost support steadily as many scalawags left it; few new recruits were acquired. Meanwhile, the freedmen were demanding a bigger share of the offices and patronage, thus squeezing out their carpetbagger allies. Finally some of the more prosperous freedmen were joining the Democrats, as they were angered at the failure of the Republicans to help them acquire land.Although historians such as W.E.B. Du
Bois looked for and celebrated a cross-racial coalition of poor
whites and blacks, such coalitions rarely formed in these years.
With long-term agricultural problems, there was an alliance later
in the century between Populists and Republicans whose coalition
won control in several states, especially in 1894. White Democrats
reacted by creating more legislative and constitutional barriers to
voter registration and voting by poor whites and blacks.
Writing in 1915 and demonstrating contemporary
biases about Reconstruction, Congressman Lynch explained that,
- "While the colored men did not look with favor upon a political alliance with the poor whites, it must be admitted that, with very few exceptions, that class of whites did not seek, and did not seem to desire such an alliance."
Lynch explained that poor whites resented the job
competition from freedmen. Furthermore, the poor whites
- "with a few exceptions, were less efficient, less capable, and knew less about matters of state and governmental administration than many of the ex-slaves.… As a rule, therefore, the whites that came into the leadership of the Republican party between 1872 and 1875 were representatives of the most substantial families of the land."
Thus, the Democrats encouraged the poor whites to
ally with them over race. They became bitterly opposed to black
Republicans. As is noted in Redeemers below,
elite white Democrats subverted any coalition threat to their
control by passage of statutes and new constitutions from 1890-1908
that effectively disfranchised most blacks and hundreds of
thousands of poor whites.
Democrats try a "New Departure"
By 1870, the Democratic–Conservative leadership across the South decided it had to end its opposition to Reconstruction as well as to black suffrage in order to survive and move on to new issues. The Grant administration had proven by its crackdown on the Ku Klux Klan that it would use as much federal power as necessary to suppress open anti-black violence. The Democrats in the North concurred. They wanted to fight the Republican Party on economic grounds rather than race. The New Departure offered the chance for a clean slate without having to refight the Civil War every election. Furthermore, many wealthy landowners thought they could control part of the newly enfranchised black electorate to their own advantage.Not all Democrats agreed; an insurgent element
continued to resist Reconstruction no matter what. Eventually, a
group called "Redeemers" took control of the party in the states.
They formed coalitions with conservative Republicans, including
scalawags and carpetbaggers, emphasizing the need for economic
modernization. Railroad building was seen as a panacea since
northern capital was needed. The new tactics were a success in
Virginia
where William
Mahone built a winning coalition. In Tennessee, the Redeemers
formed a coalition with Republican governor DeWitt Senter. Across
the South some Democrats switched from the race issue to taxes and
corruption, charging that Republican governments were corrupt and
inefficient. With continuing decrease in cotton prices, taxes
squeezed cash-poor farmers who rarely saw $20 in currency a year
but had to pay taxes in currency or lose their farm.
In North Carolina, Republican Governor William
Woods Holden used state troops against the Klan, but the
prisoners were released by federal judges. Holden became the first
governor in American history to be impeached and removed from
office. Republican political disputes in Georgia split the party
and enabled the Redeemers to take over.
In the lower South, violence continued and new
insurgent groups arose. The disputed election in Louisiana in 1872
found both Republican and Democratic candidates holding inaugural
balls while returns were reviewed. Both certified their own slates
for local parish offices in many places, causing local tensions to
rise. Finally Federal support helped certify the Republican as
governor, but the Democrat McEnery in March 1873 brought his own
militia to bear in New Orleans, the seat of government.
Slates for local offices were certified by each
candidate. In rural Grant Parish
in the Red River
Valley, freedmen fearing a Democratic attempt to take over the
parish government reinforced defenses at the Colfax courthouse in
late March. White militias gathered from the area a few miles
outside the settlement. Rumors and fears abounded on both sides.
William Ward, an African-American Union veteran and militia
captain, mustered his company in Colfax and went to
the courthouse. On Easter Sunday, April 13, 1873, the whites
attacked the defenders at the courthouse. There was confusion about
who shot one of the white leaders after an offer by the defenders
to surrender. It was a catalyst to mayhem. In the end, three whites
died and 120-150 blacks were killed, some 50 while held as
prisoners. The disproportionate numbers of black to white
fatalities and documentation of brutalized bodies are why
contemporary historians call it the Colfax
Massacre rather than the Colfax Riot, as it is known
locally.
This marked the beginning of heightened
insurgency and attacks on Republican officeholders and freedmen in
Louisiana and other Deep South states. In Louisiana Judge T.S.
Crawford and District Attorney P.H. Harris of the 12th Judicial
District were shot off their horses and killed from ambush October
8, 1873 while going to court. One widow wrote to the Department of
Justice that her husband was killed because he was a Union man and
"...of the efforts made to screen those who committed a crime..."
.
In the North, a live-and-let-live attitude made
elections more like a sporting contest. But in the Deep South, many
white citizens had not reconciled themselves to the defeat of the
war or the granting of citizenship to freedmen. As an Alabama
scalawag explained,
"Our contest here is for life, for the right to earn our
bread...for a decent and respectful consideration as human beings
and members of society."
Panic of 1873 weakens Republican Party
The Panic of 1873 hit the Southern economy hard and disillusioned many Republicans who had gambled that railroads would pull the South out of its poverty. The price of cotton fell by half; many small landowners, local merchants and cotton factors (wholesalers) went bankrupt. Sharecropping, for both black and white farmers, became more common as a way to spread the risk of owning land. The old abolitionist element in the North was aging away, or had lost interest, and was not replenished. Many carpetbaggers returned to the North or joined the Redeemers. Blacks had an increased voice in the Republican Party, but across the South it was divided by internal bickering and was rapidly losing its cohesion. Many local black leaders started emphasizing individual economic progress in cooperation with white elites, rather than racial political progress in opposition to them, a conservative attitude that foreshadowed Booker T. Washington.Nationally, President Grant took the blame for
the depression; the Republican Party lost 96 seats in all parts of
the country in the
1874 elections. The Bourbon
Democrats took control of the House and were confident of
electing Samuel J.
Tilden president in 1876. President Grant was not running for
re-election and seemed to be losing interest in the South. States
fell to the Redeemers, with only four in Republican hands in 1873,
Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina; Arkansas then
fell after the Brooks-Baxter
War in 1874.
Paramilitary groups allied with Democratic Party
Political violence had been endemic in Louisiana, but in 1874 the white militias coalesced into paramilitary organizations such as the White League, first in parishes of the Red River Valley. It was a new organization that operated openly and had political goals: the violent overthrow of Republican rule and suppression of black voting. White League chapters soon rose in many rural parishes, receiving financing for advanced weaponry from wealthy men. In one example of local violence, the White League assassinated six white Republican officeholders and five to twenty black witnesses outside Coushatta, Red River Parish in 1874. Four of the white men were related to the Republican representative of the parish.Later in 1874 the White League mounted a serious
attempt to unseat the Republican governor of Louisiana, in a
dispute that had simmered since the 1872 election. It brought 5000
troops to New Orleans to engage and overwhelm forces of the
Metropolitan Police and state militia in an effort to turn
Republican Governor William Kellogg out of office and seat McEnery.
The White League took over and held the state house and city hall,
but they retreated before the arrival of reinforcing Federal
troops. Kellogg had asked for reinforcements before, and Grant
finally responded, sending additional troops to try to quell
violence throughout plantation areas of the Red River Valley,
although 2,000 troops were already in the state.
Similarly, the Red Shirts,
another paramilitary group, arose in 1875 in Mississippi and
the Carolinas. Like the White League and White Liner rifle clubs,
these groups operated as a "military arm of the Democratic Party",
to restore white supremacy.
Democrats and many northern Republicans agreed
that Confederate nationalism and slavery were dead—the
war goals were achieved—and further federal military
interference was an undemocratic violation of historic Republican
values. The victory of Rutherford
Hayes in the hotly contested
Ohio gubernatorial election of 1875 indicated his "let alone"
policy toward the South would become Republican policy, as indeed
happened when he won the 1876 Republican nomination for
president.
An explosion of violence accompanied the campaign
for the
Mississippi's 1875 election, in which Red Shirts and Democratic
rifle clubs, operating in the open and without disguise, threatened
or shot enough Republicans to decide the election for the
Democrats. Republican Governor Adelbert Ames asked Grant for
federal troops to fight back; Grant initially refused, saying
public opinion was "tired out" of the perpetual troubles in the
South. Ames fled the state as the Democrats took over
Mississippi.
This was not the end of the violence, however, as
the campaigns and elections of 1876 were marked by additional
murders and attacks on Republicans in Louisiana, North and South
Carolina, and Florida. In South Carolina the campaign season of
1876 was marked by murderous outbreaks and fraud against freedmen.
Red Shirts paraded with arms behind Democratic candidates; they
killed blacks in the Hamburg and Ellenton, SC massacres; and one
historian estimated 150 blacks were killed in the weeks before the
1876 election across South Carolina. Red Shirts prevented almost
all black voting in two majority-black counties. The Red Shirts
were also active in North Carolina.
Election of 1876
Reconstruction continued in South Carolina, Louisiana and Florida until 1877. The elections of 1876 were accompanied by heightened violence across the Deep South. A combination of ballot stuffing and intimidating blacks suppressed their vote even in majority black counties. The White League was active in Louisiana. After Republican Rutherford Hayes won the disputed U.S. Presidential election of 1876, the national Compromise of 1877 was reached.The white Democrats in the South agreed to accept
Hayes's victory if he withdrew the last Federal troops. By this
point, the North was weary of insurgency. White Democrats
controlled most of the Southern legislatures and armed militias
controlled small towns and rural areas. With the white Democrats'
passage of disfranchising constitutions and statues, African
Americans who wanted to exercise their legal rights were repeatedly
thwarted by white Democrats for most of the next 75 years. They
considered Reconstruction a failure because the Federal government
withdrew from enforcing their ability to exercise their rights as
citizens.
Redeemers and disfranchisement
further Jim Crow lawsThe end of Reconstruction marked the beginning of
a period, 1877–1900, in which white legislators passed laws and new
constitutions that created barriers to voter registration and
voting for African-Americans and poor whites, ushering in the
nadir of American race relations. White Democrats also passed
Jim Crow
laws imposing segregation in public facilities and transportation,
as well as other restrictions on blacks. In the 1880s and 1890s,
the Populist Party in some cases allied with black Republicans.
Faced with this threat, white Democrats moved to reduce the
franchise among both groups. State legislatures passed laws
directed at reducing voting by blacks and illiterate whites,
chiefly by creating new requirements for voter registration. "It
was the very success of interracial coalitions that catalyzed the
disfranchisement movement among the previously ruling white
class."
From 1890 to 1908, starting with Mississippi, ten
of the eleven states of the Confederacy passed new constitutions or
amendments that created new requirements for voter registration,
such as poll taxes, literacy and understanding tests, and residency
requirements. The effect on black disfranchisement was immediate
and devastating. Hundreds of thousands of African Americans were
removed from voter registration rolls across the South and
effectively disfranchised. Tens of thousands of poor whites were
also disfranchised. One-party rule under white Democrats was
established. In both cases, disfranchisement lasted until deep into
the 20th century.
Reconstruction civil rights legislation was
overturned by the
United States Supreme Court. Most notably, the court held in
the Civil
Rights Cases (1883), that the 14th Amendment gave Congress the
power only to outlaw public, rather than private, discrimination.
In Plessy
v. Ferguson (1896), the court went further, ruling that
state-mandated segregation was legal as long as the law provided
for "separate
but equal" facilities.
African Americans immediately started raising
legal challenges to disfranchisement. Early challenges taken to the
Supreme Court over Mississippi's constitutional voter registration
requirements, Williams
v. Mississippi (1898), and Alabama's disfranchising provisions,
Giles v.
Harris (1903), were unsuccessful, which encouraged other states
to adopt similar provisions. Booker
T. Washington, better known for his public position as an
accomodationist, used his political contacts to raise funds and
arrange representation for several of these legal challenges.
In 1909 the interracial
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) was
established. Soon it began to participate in legal challenges, and
established its Legal Defense Fund as a separate organization. In
1915, in Guinn
v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that the grandfather
clause was unconstitutional in Oklahoma. This was the first
case in which the NAACP had filed a brief with the Supreme Court.
Other states using the grandfather clause also had to repeal it,
but states quickly developed new measures for continuing
disfranchisement. The NAACP proceeded with litigation challenging
disfranchising provisions on a case by case basis and slowly
accumulated some victories.
When the Supreme Court ruled white
primaries unconstitutional in Smith v.
Allwright (1944), civil rights organizations rushed to register
African-American voters. By 1947 the All-Citizens Registration
Committee (ACRC) of Atlanta managed to get 125,000 voters
registered in Georgia, raising black participation to 18.8% of
those eligible, from 20,000 on the rolls in 1940. Georgia, among
other Southern states, passed new legislation (1958) to once again
repress black voter registration. It was not until African-American
leadership gained passage of the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1964
and Voting Rights Act of 1965 that all American citizens regained
the ability to exercise their suffrage, first gained by African
Americans after the Civil War.
Legacy and historiography
The interpretation of Reconstruction has swung back and forth several times. Nearly all historians, however, have concluded it was a failure. In the 1865-75 period, most writers took the view that the ex-Confederates were traitors and Johnson was their ally who threatened to undo the Union's Constitutional achievements. In the 1870s and 1880s many writers argued that Johnson and his allies were not traitors but blundered badly in rejecting the 14th Amendment and setting the stage for Radical Reconstruction.Booker
T. Washington, who grew up in West Virginia during
Reconstruction, concluded that, "the Reconstruction experiment in
racial democracy failed because it began at the wrong end,
emphasizing political means and civil rights acts rather than
economic means and self-determination." His solution was to
concentrate on building the economic infrastructure of the black
community, in part by his leadership of Tuskegee Institute.
However, historians have discovered that Washington also used his
significant resources and called on northern allies to secretly
provide financing and representation in numerous lawsuits that
challenged Southern segregation restrictions and constitutional
disfranchisement, as in Alabama's Giles v.
Harris (1903) and Giles v.
Teasley (1904).
In popular literature two novels by Thomas
Dixon—The Clansman
and The
Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden —
1865–1900—romanticized white resistance to
Northern/black coercion, hailing vigilante action by the KKK. Other
authors romanticized the benevolence of slavery and the happy world
of the antebellum plantation. These sentiments were expressed on
the screen in D.W.
Griffith's anti-Republican 1915 movie The
Birth of a Nation.
The Dunning
School of scholars based at the history department of Columbia
University analyzed Reconstruction as a failure, at least after
1866, for quite different reasons. They claimed that it took
freedoms and rights from qualified whites and gave them to
unqualified blacks who were being duped by corrupt carpetbaggers
and scalawags. As one
scholar notes, "Reconstruction was a battle between two extremes:
the Democrats, as the group which included the vast majority of the
whites, standing for decent government and racial supremacy, versus
the Republicans, the Negroes, alien carpetbaggers, and renegade
scalawags, standing for dishonest government and alien ideals.
These historians wrote literally in terms of white and
black."
In the 1930s, "revisionism" became popular among
scholars. As disciples of Charles A.
Beard, revisionists focused on economics, downplaying politics
and constitutional issues. They argued that the Radical rhetoric of
equal rights was mostly a smokescreen hiding the true motivation of
Reconstruction's real backers. Howard Beale argued Reconstruction
was primarily a successful attempt by financiers, railroad builders
and industrialists in the Northeast, using the Republican Party, to
control the national government for their own selfish economic
ends. Those ends were to continue the wartime high protective tariff, the new
network of national banks, and to guarantee a "sound" currency. To
succeed the business class had to remove the old ruling agrarian class of Southern
planters and Midwestern farmers. This it did by inaugurating
Reconstruction, which made the South Republican, and by selling its
policies to the voters wrapped up in such attractive vote-getting
packages as northern patriotism or the bloody shirt. Historian
William Hesseltine added the point that the Northeastern
businessmen wanted to control the South economically, which they
did through ownership of the railroads. However, historians in the
1950s and 1960s refuted Beale's economic causation by demonstrating
that Northern businessmen were widely divergent on monetary or
tariff policy, and seldom paid attention to Reconstruction
issues.
The black scholar W.E.B. Du
Bois, in his Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880,
published in 1935, compared results across the states to show
achievements by the Reconstruction legislatures and to refute
claims about wholesale African-American control of governments. He
showed black contributions, as in the establishment of universal
public education, charitable and social institutions, and universal
suffrage as important results, and he noted their collaboration
with whites. He also pointed out that whites benefited most by the
financial deals made, and he put excesses in the perspective of the
war's aftermath. He noted that despite complaints, several states
kept their Reconstruction constitutions for nearly a quarter of a
century. Despite receiving favorable reviews, his work was largely
ignored by white historians.
In the 1960s, neoabolitionist
historians emerged, led by John
Hope Franklin, Kenneth
Stampp and Eric Foner.
Influenced by the
Civil Rights Movement, they rejected the Dunning school and
found a great deal to praise in Radical Reconstruction. Foner, the
primary advocate of this view, argued that it was never truly
completed, and that a Second Reconstruction was needed in the late
20th century to complete the goal of full equality for African
Americans. The neo-abolitionists followed the revisionists in
minimizing the corruption and waste created by Republican state
governments, saying it was no worse than Boss
Tweed's ring in New York
City.
Instead they emphasized that suppression of the
rights of African Americans was a worse scandal and a grave
corruption of America's republican ideals. They argued that the
real tragedy of Reconstruction was not that it failed because
blacks were incapable of governing, especially as they did not
dominate any state government, but that it failed because whites
raised an insurgent movement to restore white supremacy. White
elite-dominated state legislatures passed disfranchising
constitutions from 1890-1908 that effectively barred most blacks
and many poor whites from voting. This disfranchisement affected
millions of people for decades into the 20th century, and closed
African Americans and poor whites out of the political process in
the South.
Re-establishment of white supremacy meant that
within a decade, people forgot that blacks were creating thriving
middle classes in many states of the South. African Americans' lack
of representation meant they were treated as second-class citizens,
with schools and services consistently underfunded in segregated
societies, no representation on juries or in law enforcement, and
bias in other legislation. It was not until the Civil Rights
Movement and the passage of Federal legislation that African
Americans regained their suffrage and civil rights in the South,
under what is sometimes referred to as the "Second
Reconstruction."
More recent work by Nina Silber, David Blight,
Cecelia O'Leary, Laura Edwards, LeeAnn Whites, and Edward J. Blum,
has encouraged greater attention to race, religion, and issues of
gender while at the same time pushing the "end" of Reconstruction
to the end of the nineteenth century, while monographs by Charles
Reagan Wilson, Gaines Foster, W. Scott Poole have offered new views
of the southern "Lost
Cause".
Reconstruction State-by-state – Significant dates
Only Georgia has a separate article about its experiences under Reconstruction. The other state names below link to a specific section in the state history article about the Reconstruction era.See also
- List of African-American officeholders during Reconstruction
- Carpetbagger
- Disfranchisement after the Civil War
- Dunning School
- Freedman
- Freedmen's Bureau
- History of the Southern United States
- Jim Crow laws
- Neoabolitionists
- Redeemers
- Redemption (United States history)
- Radical Republican
- Scalawag
- Second Reconstruction
- Second Redemption
- Third Party System
- Voting rights in the United States
- Matthew Butler, involved in Hamburg Massacre of 1876.
- Benjamin Tillman, involved in Hamburg Massacre of 1876.
- Andrew Jackson Houston, organized the Travis Rifles to "protect" post Reconstruction Texas Democrat Government.
- Edward Douglass White-member of the White League of Louisiana-later a US Supreme Court Justice
Notes
References
- Barnes, William H., ed. History of the Thirty-ninth Congress of the United States. (1868) useful summary of Congressional activity.
- Barney, William L. Passage of the Republic: An Interdisciplinary History of Nineteenth Century America (1987). D. C. Heath ISBN 0669047589
- Berlin, Ira, ed. Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861–1867 (1982), 970 pp of archival documents; also Free at Last: A Documentary History of Slavery, Freedom, and the Civil War ed by Ira Berlin, Barbara J. Fields, and Steven F. Miller (1993)
- Blaine, James.Twenty Years of Congress: From Lincoln to Garfield. With a review of the events which led to the political revolution of 1860 (1886). By Republican Congressional leader
- Fitzgerald, Michael W. Splendid Failure (2007) Historical analysis of the Reconstruction and politics involved. ISBN 978-1-56663-734-3
- Fleming, Walter L. Documentary History of Reconstruction: Political, Military, Social, Religious, Educational, and Industrial 2 vol (1906). Uses broad collection of primary sources; vol 1 on national politics; vol 2 on states
- Memoirs of W. W. Holden (1911), North Carolina Scalawag governor
- Hyman, Harold M., ed. The Radical Republicans and Reconstruction, 1861-1870. (1967), collection of long political speeches and pamphlets.
- Lynch, John R. The Facts of Reconstruction. (New York: 1913)Full text online One of first black congressmen during Reconstruction.
- Edward McPherson, The Political History of the United States of America During the Period of Reconstruction (1875), large collection of speeches and primary documents, 1865-1870, complete text online. [The copyright has expired.]
- Palmer, Beverly Wilson and Holly Byers Ochoa, eds. The Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens 2 vol (1998), 900pp; his speeches plus and letters to and from Stevens
- Palmer, Beverly Wilson, ed/ The Selected Letters of Charles Sumner 2 vol (1990); vol 2 covers 1859-1874
- Pike, James Shepherd, The prostrate state: South Carolina under negro government (1874)
- Reid, Whitelaw. After the war: a southern tour, May 1, 1865 to May 1, 1866. (1866) by Republican editor
- Charles Sumner, "Our Domestic Relations: or, How to Treat the Rebel States" Atlantic Monthly September 1863, early Radical manifesto
Newspapers and magazines
- DeBow's Review major Southern conservative magazine; stress on business, economics and statistics
- Harper's Weekly leading New York news magazine; pro-Radical
- Nast, Thomas. magazine cartoons pro-Radical editorial cartoons
- Primary sources from Gilder-Lehrman collection
- The New York Times daily edition online through ProQuest at academic libraries
Bibliography
- for more detailed list see Reconstruction: Bibliography
Surveys
- Ayers,Edward L. The Promise of the New South: Life After Reconstruction (1992) ISBN 0-19-503756-1
- Du Bois, W. E. Burghardt. Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880'' (1935), 1998 edition reissued with introduction by David Levering Lewis ISBN 0-684-85657-3.) Counterpoint to Dunning School explores the economics and politics of the era from Marxist perspective
- Du Bois, W.E.B. "Reconstruction and its Benefits," American Historical Review, 15 (July, 1910), 781—99 JSTOR
- Dunning, William Archibald. Reconstruction: Political & Economic, 1865-1877 (1905). "Explicitly identified the granting of full Negro citizenship as Reconstruction's central flaw." After the passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments, "all the forces that made for civilization were dominated by a mass of barbarous freedmen."
- Walter Lynwood Fleming The Sequel of Appomattox, A Chronicle of the Reunion of the States(1918). Dunning School
- Foner, Eric and Mahoney, Olivia. America's Reconstruction: People and Politics After the Civil War. ISBN 0-8071-2234-3, short well-illustrated survey.
- Foner, Eric. Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877 (1988) ISBN 0-06-015851-4. Pulitzer-prize winning history and most detailed synthesis of original and previous scholarship.
- Franklin, John Hope. Reconstruction after the Civil War (1961), University of Chicago Press, 280 pages. ISBN-10: 0226260798. Explores the brevity of the North’s military occupation of the South, limited power of former slaves, influence of moderate southerners, flaws in constitutions drawn by Radical state governments, and reasons for downfall of Reconstruction.
- Litwack, Leon. Been in the Storm So Long (1979). Won Pulitzer Prize for history, based on 1930s interviews with former slaves and diaries and accounts written by former slaveholders, none previously examined by earlier scholars.
- Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. A History of the United States since the Civil War. Vol 1 and vol 2 (1917). Based on Dunning School research
- Perman, Michael. Emancipation and Reconstruction (2003).
- Randall, J. G. The Civil War and Reconstruction (1953).
- Rhodes, James G. History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 to the McKinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896. Volume: 6. (1920). 1865-72. Narrative by Pulitzer prize winner; argues Reconstruction was a political disaster because it violated the rights of white Southerners.
- Schouler, James. History of the United States of America: Under the Constitution vol. 7. 1865-1877. The Reconstruction Period (1917) online
- Stalcup, Brenda. ed. Reconstruction: Opposing Viewpoints (Greenhaven Press: 1995). Text uses primary documents to present opposing viewpoints.
- Stampp, Kenneth M. The Era of Reconstruction, 1865-1877 (1967); short survey
- Trefousse, Hans L. Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction Greenwood (1991), 250 entries
- Williams, T. Harry. "An Analysis of Some Reconstruction Attitudes" The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 12, No. 4. (Nov., 1946), pp. 469-486. JSTOR
National politics; Constitutional issues
- Belz, Herman. Emancipation and Equal Rights: Politics and Constitutionalism in the Civil War Era (1978) pro-moderate. online edition
- Belz, Herman. A New Birth of Freedom: The Republican Party and Freedman's Rights, 1861-1866 (2000) pro-moderate.
- Benedict, Michael Les. The Impeachment and Trial of Andrew Johnson (1999), pro-Radical. online edition
- Benedict, Michael Les. "Preserving the Constitution: The Conservative Bases of Radical Reconstruction," Journal of American History vol 61 #1 (1974) pp 65-90, online in JSTOR
- Blight, David. Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (2000). Examines national memory of Civil War, Reconstruction, and Redemption, North-South reunion, and the retreat from equality for African Americans.
- Blum, Edward J. "Reforging the White Republic: Race, Religion, and American Nationalism, 1865-1898" (2005).
- Donald, David Herbert. Charles Sumner and the Rights of Man (1970), Pulitzer prize winning biography
- Dunning, William A. "The Constitution of the United States in Reconstruction" in Political Science Quarterly Vol. 2, No. 4 (Dec., 1887), pp. 558-602 JSTOR
- Dunning, William A. "Military Government in the South During Reconstruction" Political Science Quarterly Vol. 12, No. 3 (Sep., 1897), pp. 381-406 JSTOR
- Gambill, Edward. Conservative Ordeal: Northern Democrats and Reconstruction, 1865-1868. (1981). Political history of Democratic Party unable to shed its Civil War label of treason and defeatism, even as it successfully blocked a few elements of Radical Reconstruction.
- Gillette, William. Retreat from Reconstruction, 1869-1879. Louisiana State University Press: 1979. Traces failure of Reconstruction to the power of Democrats, administrative inefficiencies, racism, and lack of commitment by northern Republicans.
- Harris, William C. With Charity for All: Lincoln and the Restoration of the Union (1997) portrays Lincoln as opponent of Radicals.
- Hyman, Harold M. A More Perfect Union (1975), constitutional history of Civil War & Reconstruction.
- McLaughlin, Andrew. A Constitutional History of the United States (1935) Pulitzer Prize; ch 45-47 are on Reconstruction online version
- McKitrick, Eric L. Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction (1961) portrays Johnson as weak politician unable to forge coalitions.
- McPherson, James M. The Abolitionist Legacy: From Reconstruction to the NAACP (1975) (ISBN 0-691-10039-X)
- Simpson, Brooks D. Let Us Have Peace: Ulysses S. Grant and the Politics of War and Reconstruction, 1861-1868 (1991).
- Stryker, Lloyd Paul; Andrew Johnson: A Study in Courage 1929. pro-Johnson
- Trefousse, Hans L. Andrew Johnson: A Biography (1989)
- Trefousse, Hans L. Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth-Century Egalitarian (1997)
South: regional, state & local studies
- Brown, Canter Jr. Florida's Black Public Officials, 1867-1924
- Campbell. Randolph B. Grass-Roots Reconstruction in Texas, 1865-1880 (1998)
- Coulter, E. Merton. The Civil War and Readjustment in Kentucky (1926)
- Coulter, E. Merton. The South During Reconstruction, 1865-1877 (1947). Dunning School. region-wide history
- Donald, David H. "The Scalawag in Mississippi Reconstruction," The Journal of Southern History Vol. 10, No. 4 (Nov., 1944), pp. 447-460 JSTOR
- Du Bois, W. E. Burghardt "The Freedmen's Bureau," (1901)
- Ebner, David, and Larry Langman, eds. Hollywood's Image of the South: A Century of Southern Films Greenwood Press. 2001. Ch 9-10 on Reconstruction and KKK.
- Fischer, Roger. The Segregation Struggle in Louisiana, 1862-1877. (University of Illinois Press: 1974) Study of free persons of color in New Orleans who provided leadership in the unsuccessful fight against segregation of schools and public accommodations.
- Fitzgerald, Michael W. Urban Emancipation: Popular Politics in Reconstruction Mobile, 1860–1890. (Louisiana State University Press, 2002. 301 pp. ISBN 0-8071-2837-6.)
- Fitzgerald, Michael R. "Radical Republicanism and the White Yeomanry During Alabama Reconstruction, 1865-1868." Journal of Southern History 54 (November 1988): 565-96. Online at JSTOR
- Fleming, Walter L. Walter Lynwood Fleming Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama 1905.
- Foner, Eric. Freedom's Lawmakers: A Directory of Black Officeholders During Reconstruction (Revised edition, LSU Press, 1996) biographies of more than 1,500 officeholders.
- Garner, James Wilford. Reconstruction in Mississippi (1901), Dunning School online edition
- Hamilton, Peter Joseph. The Reconstruction Period (1906), full length history of era; Dunning School approach; 570 pp; chapters on each state
- Harris, William C. The Day of the Carpetbagger: Republican Reconstruction in Mississippi (1979) online edition
- Holt, Thomas. Black over White: Negro Political Leadership in South Carolina During Reconstruction. (University of Illinois Press: 1977). Black elected officials, their divisions, and battles with white governors who controlled patronage and their ultimate failure.
- Kolchin, Peter. First Freedom: The Responses of Alabama's Blacks to Emancipation and Reconstruction. (Greenwood Press: 1972) Explores black migration, labor, and social structure in the first five years of Reconstruction.
- Morrow, Ralph E. "Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction." The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 41, No. 2. (Sep., 1954), pp. 197-218. in JSTOR
- A. B. Moore, "Railroad Building in Alabama During the Reconstruction Period" The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 1, No. 4. (Nov., 1935), pp. 421-441. JSTOR
- Olsen, Otto H. ed., Reconstruction and Redemption in the South (1980), state by state, neoabolitionist
- Perman, Michael. The Road to Redemption: Southern Politics, 1869-1879. University of North Carolina Press. 1984. detailed state-by-state narrative of Conservatives
- Ramsdell, Charles W., "Presidential Reconstruction in Texas ", Southwestern Historical Quarterly, (1907) v.11#4 277 - 317.
- Ramsdell, Charles William. Reconstruction in Texas. Columbia University Press, 1910. Dunning school
- Reynolds, John S. Reconstruction in South Carolina, 1865—1877, Negro Universities Press, 1969
- Rubin, Hyman III. South Carolina Scalawags (2006)
- Russ, Jr., William A. "The Negro and White Disfranchisement During Radical Reconstruction" The Journal of Negro History Vol. 19, No. 2 (Apr., 1934), pp. 171-192 JSTOR
- Russ, Jr., William A. "Registration and Disfranchisement Under Radical Reconstruction," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol. 21, No. 2 (Sep., 1934), pp. 163-180 JSTOR
- Simkins, Francis Butler, and Robert Hilliard Woody. South Carolina during Reconstruction (1932), revisionist (Beardian) school
- Stover, John F. The Railroads of the South, 1865-1900: A Study in Finance and Control (1955)
- Summers, Mark Wahlgren. Railroads, Reconstruction, and the Gospel of Prosperity: Aid Under the Radical Republicans, 1865-1877 (1984)
- Taylor, Alrutheus A., Negro in Tennessee 1865-1880 (1974) ISBN 0-87152-165-2
- Taylor, Alrutheus, Negro in South Carolina During the Reconstruction (AMS Press: 1924) ISBN 0-404-00216-1
- Taylor, Alrutheus, The Negro in the Reconstruction Of Virginia (The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History: 1926)
- Taylor, A. A. "The Negro in South Carolina During the Reconstruction" The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 9-11 (1924-1926) (multi-part article) JSTOR full text
- Trelease, Allen W. White Terror: The Conspiracy and Southern Reconstruction, (Louisiana State University Press: 1971, 1995). detailed treatment of the Klan, and similar groups.
- Wharton, V. L. "The Race Issue in the Overthrow of Reconstruction in Mississippi," Phylon (1940-1956) Vol. 2, No. 4 (4th Qtr., 1941), pp. 362-370 in JSTOR
- Wiggins, Sarah Woolfolk. The Scalawag in Alabama Politics, 1865-1881 (1991)
- Woody, R. H. "The Labor and Immigration Problem of South Carolina during Reconstruction" The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol. 18, No. 2 (Sep., 1931), pp. 195-212 JSTOR
External links
- ''Reconstruction: The Second Civil War 2004 PBS film and transcript connecting the replacement of Civil Rights with segregation at the end of 19th century Reconstruction with 1960s Civil Rights Movement.
- Guide to Reconstruction History links to primary and secondary sources
- PBS' American Experience: Reconstruction Historians Eric Foner, David Blight, and Ed Ayers discuss "Civil Rights During Reconstruction"
- Proclamation of August 1866, declaring the Insurrection at an end.
- Lincoln and Freedom: Reconstruction
- Reconstruction in Mississippi by Donald J. Mabry
- "Reconstruction Historiography: A Source of Teaching Ideas" by Robert P. Green, Jr. (1991)
- In-depth timeline of Reconstruction
- W. S. Simkins, "Why the Ku Klux," 4 The Alcalde (June 1916): 735-748. online
reconstruct in Catalan: Reconstrucció
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آمریکا
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reconstruct in Chinese: 美國重建時期
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accommodate, adapt, adjust, alter, ameliorate, better, break up, change, convert, copy, deform, denature, diversify, do over, do up,
doctor, duplicate, fit, fix, improve, make over, meliorate, mitigate, modify, modulate, mutate, overhaul, overthrow, patch, qualify, re-create, re-form,
readjust, realign, rearrange, reassemble, rebuild, reclaim, recondition, reconstitute, recover, redesign, redo, reestablish, refabricate, refashion, refit, reform, refound, regenerate, rehabilitate, reinstitute, reissue, rejuvenate, remake, remodel, renew, renovate, reorder, reorganize, repair, repeat, reprint, reproduce, reshape, reshuffle, restitute, restore, restructure, resurrect, retool, revamp, revise, revive, ring the changes, shift
the scene, shuffle the cards, subvert, turn the scale, turn
the tables, turn the tide, turn upside down, vary, work a change, worsen