USA Assignment
USA Assignment
USA Assignment
Between 1863 and 1877, the U.S. government undertook the task of integrating nearly four
million formerly enslaved people into society after the Civil War bitterly divided the country
over the issue of slavery. A white slaveholding south that had built its economy and culture
on slave labor was now forced by its defeat in a war that claimed 620,000 lives to change its
economic, political and social relations with African Americans.
“The war destroyed the institution of slavery, ensured the survival of the union, and set in
motion economic and political changes that laid the foundation for the modern nation,” wrote
Eric Foner, the author of Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution 1863-1877.
“During Reconstruction, the United States made its first attempt. . .to build an egalitarian
society on the ashes of slavery.”
Reconstruction is generally divided into three phases: Wartime Reconstruction, Presidential
Reconstruction and Radical or Congressional Reconstruction, which ended with the
Compromise of 1877, when the U.S. government pulled the last of its troops from southern
states, ending the Reconstruction era.
Wartime Reconstruction
December 8, 1863: The Ten-Percent Plan
Two years into the Civil War in 1863 and nearly a year after signing the Emancipation
Proclamation, President Abraham Lincoln announced the Proclamation of Amnesty and
Reconstruction or the Ten-Percent Plan, which required 10 percent of a Confederate state’s
voters to pledge an oath of allegiance to the Union to begin the process of readmission to the
Union.
With the exception of top Confederate leaders, the proclamation also included a full pardon
and restoration of property, excluding enslaved people, for those who took part in the war
against the Union. Eric Foner writes that Lincoln’s Ten-Percent Plan “might be better viewed
as a device to shorten the war and solidify white support for emancipation” rather than a
genuine effort to reconstruct the south.
July 2, 1864: The Wade Davis Bill
Radical Republicans from the House and the Senate considered Lincoln’s Ten-Percent plan
too lenient on the South. They considered success nothing less than a complete
transformation of southern society.
Passed in Congress in July 1864, the Wade-Davis Bill required that 50 percent of white males
in rebel states swear a loyalty oath to the constitution and the union before they could
convene state constitutional convents. Co-sponsored by Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio and
Congressman Henry Davis of Maryland, the bill also called for the government to grant
African American men the right to vote and that “anyone who has voluntarily borne arms
against the United States,” should be denied the right to vote.
Asserting that he wasn’t ready to be “inflexibly committed to any single plan of restoration,”
Lincoln pocket-vetoed the bill, which infuriated Wade and Davis, who accused the President
in a manifesto of “executive usurpation” in an effort to ensure the support of southern whites
once the war was over. The Wade-Davis Bill was never implemented.
Congressional Reconstruction
March 2, 1867: Reconstruction Act of 1867
The Reconstruction Act of 1867 outlined the terms for readmission to representation of rebel
states. The bill divided the former Confederate states, except for Tennessee, into five military
districts. Each state was required to write a new constitution, which needed to be approved by
a majority of voters—including African Americans—in that state. In addition, each state was
required to ratify the 13th and 14th amendments to the Constitution. After meeting these
criteria related to protecting the rights of African Americans and their property, the former
Confederate states could gain full recognition and federal representation in Congress.
February 23, 1870: Hiram Revels Elected as First Black U.S. Senator
On this day, Hiram Revels, an African Methodist Episcopal minister, became the first African
American to serve in Congress when he was elected by the Mississippi State Legislature to
finish the last two years of a term.
During Reconstruction, 16 African Americans served in Congress. By 1870, Black men held
three Congressional seats in South Carolina and a seat on the state Supreme Court—Jonathan
J. Wright. Over 600 Black men served in state legislators during the Reconstruction period.
Blanche K. Bruce, another Mississippian, became the first African American in 1875 to serve
a full term in the U.S. Senate.
Conclusion
The end of Reconstruction, and the federal government’s attempts to create a bi-racial
democracy in the former Confederate states, ushered in a new era of white supremacy. After
taking back control of state legislatures, conservative white Democrats created new state
Constitutions that disfranchised black voters through arbitrary literary tests and burdensome
poll taxes. Southern legislators also passed stringent new segregation or “Jim Crow” laws that
rigidly segregated black and white passengers on trains and street cars and prohibited or
limited African-American access to public places such as libraries, parks, hotels, and
restaurants.
The federal government’s failure to maintain the promises and ideals of Reconstruction meant
that African-Americans would continue to fight for civil rights and equality throughout the
late nineteenth and twentieth century. Only in the 1960s, during what some historians call the
Second Reconstruction, would federal legislation finally strike down voter and segregation
laws passed after the first Reconstruction that denied civil rights and equality under the law to
African-Americans.
References
1. History.com
2. Marc Bloch
3. Class 8th American History (chapter-16)
4. www.lexology.com