Reconstruction Era: Struggle for African American Citizenship

801 Words2 Pages

After the devastating Civil War, the nation had millions of freed slaves. Most former slaves were African Americans and the South were suffering a time of discrimination and living in horrible working and living conditions. The Union had a challenge in protecting the African American's rights of citizenship. This began the era of Reconstruction. Reconstruction’s goal was to protect and help African Americans get back on their feet and adapt them to this new society. Also, an attempt for the United States to become a unified country. Reconstruction wasn’t a success but it wasn’t a failure. It was a success by the thirteenth, fourteenth, and the fifteenth amendments being passed which abolished slavery for African Americans, becoming full citizens, …show more content…

He advised Lincoln to freed the slaves because of Great Britain’s involvement with the South. England and the South had a good relationship because British textile mills were dependent on the South’s cotton. Due to the Civil War occurring, the amount of cotton was decreasing due to Lincoln’s order of a naval blockade of the South which didn’t allow trade ships from overseas. Sumner convinced Lincoln because if the war was over slavery than the Union, the British would not be good with the South, because the British was against slavery. Frederick Douglass, an ex-slave and abolitionist leader, urged Lincoln to free the slaves in an editorial in his abolitionist newspaper: “The Negro is the key of the situation - the pivot upon which the whole rebellion turns. Teach the rebels and traitors that the price they are pay for the attempt to abolish this Government must be the abolition of slavery.” (Tackach 41) Many slaves were achieving their freedom. In March and July 1862, Congress passed the slave confiscation acts. The first act prohibited military personnel from returning runaway slaves to their owners. The second act, which Lincoln opposed, freed all of the slaves of owners who supported the Southern rebellion. (Tackach …show more content…

Congress began working on the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In January 1864, Senator John B. Henderson of Missouri submitted the first of several proposals to abolish slavery through a constitutional amendment. Senate Judiciary Committee combined several proposals into the draft of one amendment, which was passed by a decisive vote of thirty-eight to six. The amendment failed to get two-thirds of the House of Representatives, which was the number required by the Constitution for amendments in favor. Lincoln intervened, insisting that the Thirteenth Amendment be part of the Republic Party. On January 31, 1865, the House of Representatives passed the Thirteenth Amendment by a vote of 119 to 56. But with the Emancipation Proclamation, and the Thirteenth Amendment, people were formerly counted as three-fifths of a citizen were now counted as full citizens. This increased the political power of whites in the former Confederate states, which earned an increased number of representatives in Congress and the Electoral College based on the full citizenship of African Americans, many of whom were barred from voting. On December 6, 1865, the thirteenth amendment was passed which abolished slavery and all forms of involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime, throughout the whole United States. It also said that Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. (Tackach

Open Document