Chapter 15: Reconstruction Flashcards

1
Q

Radical Republican

A

A shifting group of Republican congressmen, who favored abolishing slavery and advocated full rights for former slaves in the South

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2
Q

Freedmen’s Bureau

A

Agency established by Congress in March 1865 to provide social, educational, and economic services as well as advice and protection to former slaves

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3
Q

Presidential Reconstruction

A

the immediate post-Civil War era, 1865-1866, when President Andrew Johnson took the lead to return full rights to the former Confederate states

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4
Q

Congressional Reconstruction

A

The 1867-1870 period when the Republican-dominated Congress controlled Reconstruction era policy (“Radical Reconstruction”)

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5
Q

Redemption

A

Used by opponents of Reconstruction for the era in which the federal government ended its involvement in Southern affairs, and southern whites took control of state governments and ended black political rights

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6
Q

Union Leagues

A

A southern Republican Party organization led by African-Americans, Freedmen trying to meet and push into the political system

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7
Q

Sharecropping

A

Labor system that evolved during and after Reconstruction whereby landowners furnished laborers with a house, farm animals, tools, and advanced credit in exchange for a share of the laborer’s crop

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8
Q

40 acres and a mule

A

General Sherman’s plan to provide land to black families by redistributing from former plantation owners’ land

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9
Q

Sojourner Truth

A
  • calls out Frederick Douglass’ in his remark “One step at as time” and speaks out against the men who are celebrating their freedom and suffrage despite the absence of women’s suffrage
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10
Q

Hiram R. Revels

A

1st black man to win a Senate seat, Jefferson Davis’s seat

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11
Q

15th Amendment

A

1870- regardless of color/past servitude, no one can be excluded from voting

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12
Q

Benjamin Wade

A

President Pro Tempore of the Senate who would take Andrew Johnson’s seat as President if the impeachment resulted in removal from office

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13
Q

Lyman Trumbull

A

introduces the Extension of Freedman’s Bureau (granted original plan was 1 year under Lincoln’s design but he felt it should be long term) & Civil Rights Act of 1866 (give blacks’ their citizenship, silent on voting)
Johnson vetoes

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14
Q

14th Amendment

A
  • establishes blacks born or naturalized in America as U.S. citizens and declares that no state can deny them their citizenship nor shall they deprive them of LLP without due process, establishes equal protection of the laws
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15
Q

13th Amendment

A
  • abolishes slavery and declares blacks as “free”
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16
Q

Grant Administration

A

Takes big steps to protect black citizens, such as sending military troops to fight against illegal aggression against black rights

17
Q

Carpetbaggers

A

northern men that move south in hopes to gain wealth, provide reform in the south as well as rights to the blacks

18
Q

Scalawags

A

southern men that move south in hopes to gain wealth, provide reform in the south and fight for rights for blacks

19
Q

Black Codes

A
  • state legislative laws that restricted black rights, mostly voting right, that white citizens enjoyed, including hunting, fishing, free grazing of livestock, owning guns caused by Johnson’s amnesty
20
Q

Ku Klux Klan

A
  • Formed by like-minded southern Democrats in Tennessee in 1866 as a form of violent, illegal organized crime against white Republican political leaders and blacks/black teachers
  • goal was to end Reconstruction
21
Q

Jim Crow Segregation

A

System of marginalization against blacks from 1870s-1960s to tie the black majority to sharecropping, restrict their voting rights, intimidate and threaten them through lynching and violence, and segregate via public facilities, transportation, schools, etc.
enhanced by Plessy v. Ferguson

22
Q

Charles Sumner

A
  • Leader of the Radical Republicans in the Senate that wished to reform the southern government since it was a “copy and paste” of the former Confederate government
23
Q

Andrew Johnson

A
  • 2nd worst(least effective) president in the US, EXTREMELY RACIST
  • required the southern states to simply agree to the 13th amendment to be be part of the Union again, major period of amnesty that left the southern government exactly as it was before
  • refused to advocate for any black rights, vetoed so many black rights laws that every single veto was eventually overridden
  • impeached, but 1 vote away from being removed
24
Q

Thaddeus Stevens

A
  • co-leader with Charles Sumner of the Radical Republicans in the Senate in support of southern govt. reform
25
Q

Booker T. Washington

A
  • speaks on the intense desire of newly freed blacks to learn, read, write, and go to school
  • symbolizes the idea that blacks in education/schooling were the primary indicator of newly recognized freedom
26
Q

Frederick Douglass

A
  • advocates that newly freed blacks gain an education as he knows it is the strongest indicator of freedom
  • advocates women’s rights but responds to angered women’s right movement saying “one step at a time”
    angers women (Sojourner Truth)
27
Q

W.E.B. Dubois

A
  • believed in the idea that African Americans had to educate themselves in order to push for liberty
28
Q

Rutherford B. Hayes

A

Republican nominee in election of 1876
Democratic Senate refused to count votes despite 8-7 count for Hayes in the 15-men Electoral Commission
Hayes promised to reverse Reconstruction and remove federal troops from the South so Senate agreed to count the votes
Hayes removes troops and self-development of the southern government continues, causing a long and painful period of segregation and discrimination

29
Q

Samuel Tilden

A
  • Democrat nominee & former New York governor in Election of 1876 who promised to end federal corruption, “allow prosperity,” and leave the Reconstruction movement to die