The Civil War will always be known as a climax in American history but the Reconstruction of 1865 to 1877 will always be memorialized as the backbone of United States as it is perceived currently. The Reconstruction Era, despite the tangling controversy, profitably entrusted upon the Union, a country unified as one nation, which protected the rights for those that may consider the United States as a home. Former slaves handed over their shackles in exchanged for the right to be called a citizen of the United States and all of the privileges and immunities associated with membership. The Reconstruction birthed a new essence of equality; it could not maintain its energy and was eventually met with repercussions from many Ex-Confederates and related …show more content…
sympathizers, marking its downfall in 1877. At the time of Reconstruction, the most affluent programs created by the Republicans were the creation of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, which were applied to the Constitution. The 13th Amendment released African-Americans from enslavement but left them broke and without economic opportunities. To avoid control of African-Americans by white Southerners, the late Abraham Lincoln and the Republican Party in Congress promptly started the Freedmen’s Bureau. The Freedman’s Bureau was formally arranged to be terminated within the year, the impending threat of the Black Codes against African-Americans granted the Republicans to renew its tenure and broaden its potential. The Freedman’s Bureau strongly sought employment for former slaves and keeps in check their relationships between their, often and mainly former, white employers in a struggle to curve exploitation. The Black Codes cited vagrancy as a punishable crime, which was established within the legal systems of the Southern states. Many African-Americans did not have the luxury of getting land and housing due to their limited economic opportunities and thus making them outlined as vagrants. Southern whites would throw former slaves in jail due to the vagrancy clause and made them do mandatory labor. It was a loophole that Southerners exploited to cope with the loss of slave labor. To straighten out some of these injustices, the Freedmen’s Bureau represented many African-Americans when they could not be appropriately represented in court. The most valuable contribution that the Freedmen’s Bureau provided to former slaves was education. Most African-Americans during the time period could not read or write, severely obstructing their ability to exceed their low social and economic class. The Freedmen’s Bureau spent many of the government’s funding on constructing schools for the former slaves in affiliation with private societies who donated large amounts of money to pay teachers and buy books. The Freedmen’s Bureau, in turn also created resentment from white Southerners who felt incapacitated. It was not long until the Freedman’s Bureau grew out of favor with the American public and later fell into its unfortunate end in 1872. In an effort to protect the rights of African-Americans, post-Freedmen’s Bureau, a Republican congress passed into law the 14th Amendment in 1868. The 14th Amendment granted equal protection of the law and overturned multiple Supreme Court rulings, for example the Dred Scott v. Sandford case. The first clause of the 14th Amendment gave “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State where in they reside.” In addition, it deprived states from enacting laws “which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.” The 14th Amendment was a direct insult towards the Black Codes and, of course, to other discriminatory laws that lowered African-Americans status. It was memorable in creating an increase of equalized society and assuring protection of rights for former slaves. The Republicans gained many victories during the Reconstruction Era, but in addition had its downfalls.
A failure that the Reconstruction brought was the growing corruption in public and private offices. After the Civil War, Southern states no longer could allow slavery and those who were still promoting the archaic practice of slavery could no longer vote or hold political office. The reaction created an opening for “carpetbaggers” and “scalawags” to take advantage of the political turmoil to further their own self-interests. Many previous Democratic members decided to leave the Democratic Party and side with the Republican Party after the Civil War for political gain. Switching to the Republican Party was a smart idea because it allowed them the ability to be able to vote and hold public office after the application of Lincoln’s ten percent plan in the South. The white Southern Democrats began to build hostility towards the “carpetbaggers” and “scalawags” as they concluded they were the prime source of an imperious government. The Union had disturbed the social web of Southern society before, and after a while, created programs aimed at scavenging the South for what little still remains. The growing corruption created the awareness that the North was exploiting the South. Ex-Confederates could not support the programs that impaired them. For this reason, corruption was a significant factor in the demise of the Reconstruction in
1877. A separate failure of Reconstruction is that it did not reach all of its proposed objectives to advance African-Americans from their feeling of inability and inferiority. After the Union troops were removed from most Southern states, the primarily white Democrats in the legislature, passed laws that discriminated against former slaves, for example the Jim Crow Laws. The Jim Crow Laws harshly restricted the Civil Rights and liberties in Southern states and solely reversed the impact of many features of the Freedmen’s Bureau and the Reconstruction Amendments for nearly one hundred years. To insure Democratic power in the South, Democrats deprived the African-Americans of their voting rights through old previsions called the ‘Grandfather” clauses. In the end, Reconstruction of 1865 to 1877 was a determined task, but it eventually failed in assisting former slaves. The Republicans had many opportunities to seize their objectives but wasted it by punishing the South. The Southern response to the North conclusively delayed African-Americans their Civil Rights and liberties. Despite the Reconstruction downfall, three of the most important Amendments were constituted into law. It took close to one hundred years for African-Americans to receive their full rights as American citizens.
The Civil War marked a defining moment in United States history. Long simmering sectional tensions reached critical when eleven slaveholding states seceded from the Union and formed the Confederate States of America. Political disagreement gave way to war as the Confederates insisted they had the right to leave the Union, while the loyal states refused to allow them to go. Four years of fighting claimed almost 1.5 million casualties, resulting in a Union victory. Even though the North won the war, they did a horrible job in trying to win the peace, or in other words, the Reconstruction era. Rather than eliminating slavery in the South, the Southerners had a new form of slavery, which was run by a new set of codes called "Black Codes”. With the help of President Johnson, the South continued their plantations, in essence becoming exactly what they were before the war. Overall, the South won Reconstruction because in the end they got slavery (without the name), they got an easy pass back into the Union, and things reverted back to the way they had been prior the war.
The Civil war was possibly the greatest tragedy that this country had ever faced. Years of constant arguing, compromises and cynical ideas about slavery pushed this so called "United Nation" into an atrocious collision between the Northern abolitionists and the Southern proslavery farmers and plantation owners. The nation suffered enormous losses economically and went into a downward spiral. The reconstruction period began with many leaders stepping up to try and fix this crippled country, but it didn't turn out like everyone hoped. Slavery was still the largest issue and the reconstruction halted because of the disagreements the people faced. After many years of working, compromising and passing laws, the task proved itself to be impossible, as the country remained to be separated. The lack of unity was present because most of the amendments, laws and rules passed during reconstruction were created to protect and ensure the rights of African Americans. However the South continued to promote slavery and "putting blacks in their place" until the 1950's.
Reconstruction could be considered one of the largest projects ever undertaken. The mess that was the south, left in the ruins of a bloody war, called for drastic measures. The inquisition that begs to be asked is whether or not this venture was a success. Unfortunately the answer isn't as simple as "yes" or "no". Although many promises were broken, the much-debated goals of Reconstruction are still present in the minds of today's leaders as we continue to rebuild our country.
After a war that claimed the lives of more men than that of all other wars combined, much of the country was left in ruins, literally and figuratively. Dozens of towns in the South had been burned to the ground. Meanwhile, the relations between the North and South had crumbled to pieces. Something needed to be done so that the country could once again be the United States of America, not the Divided States of America. The years from 1865 to 1877 were a time of rebuilding – the broken communities and the broken relations. This time period was known as Reconstruction. Reconstruction was a failure on the basis that the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments that were passed should have given protection and freedom to the African American people, instead, it actually hurt them because the laws were not enforced, and eventually lead to the organization of white supremacy terrorist groups.
Discuss Whether Reconstruction Was a Success or a Failure. Reconstruction is the period of rebuilding the south that preceded the Civil War (1861-1865). This period of time is set by the question, now what? The Union won the war and most of the south was destroyed. Devastation, buildings turned into crumbles and lost crops.
Reconstruction is known as the period after the Civil war. The whole country was separated in two, people didn’t know what to do, the south was completely destroyed, and there were a lot of decisions to be made by the president. It lasted four years, and there was over half a million casualties between the union (North) and the confederate states (South). The north was declared the winner of the war after General Lee surrender in the Appomattox court house on April 9, 1865. The causes of the war was the secession of several southern states, they argued that it was up to them and it was in their rights to decide whether they should make slavery legal or illegal in their own boundaries. But the Union had other things in mind, the union wanted to decide whether or not the states were going to have slaves. This was just to make sure the country was equal on slavery and non-slavery on both sides, but states thought the union was abusing their power and being too strict on them, and that is when they decided to secede. The first state to secede was south Carolina, then they were followed by six other states, among those states were Florida, Texas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. These states got together and created the confederate states of America in February 4, 1861, and the president was Jefferson Davis, they also made a government similar to the one of the U.S. Constitution.
The Reconstruction was undoubtedly a failure. The political and social aim of Reconstruction was to form national unity as well as create civil rights and equality for African Americans. Even though Reconstruction laid the foundation for equal rights in the United States, it did not achieve its primary goals. In the time of Reconstruction, many African Americans still felt the effects of oppression and many were still trapped in an undesirable social and economic class. The Reconstruction was an overall fail despite the fact that it was the shaky groundwork for a fight for equality in the years to come.
America has gone through many hardships and struggles since coming together as a nation involving war and changes in the political system. Many highly regarded leaders in America have come bestowing their own ideas and foundation to provide a better life for “Americans”, but no other war or political change is more infamous than the civil war and reconstruction. Reconstruction started in 1865 and ended in 1877 and still to date one of the most debated issues in American history on whether reconstruction was a failure or success as well as a contest over the memory, meaning, and ending of the war. According to, “Major Problems in American History” David W. Blight of Yale University and Steven Hahn of the University of Pennsylvania take different stances on the meaning of reconstruction, and what caused its demise. David W. Blight argues that reconstruction was a conflict between two solely significant, but incompatible objectives that “vied” for attention both reconciliation and emancipation. On the other hand Steven Hahn argues that former slaves and confederates were willing and prepared to fight for what they believed in “reflecting a long tradition of southern violence that had previously undergirded slavery” Hahn also believes that reconstruction ended when the North grew tired of the 16 year freedom conflict. Although many people are unsure, Hahn’s arguments presents a more favorable appeal from support from his argument oppose to Blight. The inevitable end of reconstruction was the North pulling federal troops from the south allowing white rule to reign again and proving time travel exist as freed Africans in the south again had their civil, political, and economical position oppressed.
During the 1800s, the succeeding era following the American Civil War was sought to be a period of prosperity, privilege and freedom for those affected by the calamitous war and preceding period of oppression. This era of reconstruction made a genuine effort to; Readmit Confederate States to Union, establish and defend the rights to newly-freed African Americans, and integrate them into the United State's social, economic and political operations. However, the reality of this adverse situation was that southern, democratic radicals would institute new laws known as "Black Codes" (OI) which would set a nationwide precedent that they would go as far as they needed to maintain their confederate way of life. Other southern radicals had also created White Supremacy Organizations to combat opposing Republicans and freedmen. The severity of the situation synergized with Confederate hate established the grounds in which the efforts of Reconstruction ultimately failed.
Reconstruction has been brutally murdered! For a little over a decade after the Civil War, the victorious North launched a campaign of social, economic, and political recovery in South. Martial law was also implemented in the South. Eventually, the North hoped to admit the territory in the former Confederacy back into the United States as states. The 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments freed the African Americans, made them citizens, and gave them the right to vote. Despite this, Reconstruction was unfortunately cut short in 1877. The North killed Recosntruction because of racism, negligence, and distractions.
William Mason Grosvenor believes that Reconstruction should be harsh. Grosvenor has two main arguments to support this belief, manifest destiny and the potential for the reoccurrence of a similar event to the war if Reconstruction was carried out in a lenient manner. Grosvenor argues that the country, pre-Civil War, was never truly a single unified country, but rather a group of peoples with vastly different values held together by a constitution which they had outgrown, saying, “[n]o chemical union had ever taken place; for that the white-hot crucible of civil war was found necessary.” Furthermore, Grosvenor believes that the succession of the South demonstrated this divide while simultaneously violating the doctrine of manifest destiny through
Reconstruction was the time period following the Civil War, which lasted from 1865 to 1877, in which the United States began to rebuild. The term can also refer to the process the federal government used to readmit the defeated Confederate states to the Union. While all aspects of Reconstruction were not successful, the main goal of the time period was carried out, making Reconstruction over all successful. During this time, the Confederate states were readmitted to the Union, the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments were ratified, and African Americans were freed from slavery and able to start new lives.
Despite all of Reconstruction’s promises and successes, the era included many failures, too. One such failure was the formation of the Ku Klux Klan and other racially prejudiced groups in the South that promoted violence towards African Americans. Another failure involved the corruption seen during Reconstruction by both the North and South. The carpetbaggers who were Northerners helped spread corruption in the Reconstruction Era by moving from their home state in the North securing a political office or position in the South to carry out the plans of the Radical Republicans. In the South, many local governments disenfranchised or created poll taxes for African American voters enabling them to vote.
After the Civil War, the victorious Union enacted a policy of Reconstruction in the former Confederate states. Reconstruction was aimed at creating as smooth a transition as possible for the southern states to re-enter the Union as well as enacting economic and social changes. However, several factors brought about its failure, and as a result the consequences can be seen in the race problems we still have today. In 1862, President Lincoln had appointed temporary military governors to re-establish functional governments in occupied southern states. In order for a state to be allowed to re-enter the Union, it had to meet the criteria, which was established to be that at least 10 percent of the voting population polled in 1860 must denounce the Confederacy and swear allegiance to the Union again. However this was not good enough for Congress, which at the time was dominated by Radical Republicans who fervently called for social and economic change in the south, specifically the rights of blacks. They were especially concerned with guaranteeing black civil and voting rights, and criticized Lincoln for excluding this in the original plan for Reconstruction.
When Reconstruction began in 1865, a broken America had just finished fighting the Civil War. In all respects, Reconstruction was mainly just that. It was a time period of “putting back the pieces”, as people say. It was the point where America attempted to become a full running country once more. This, though, was not an easy task. The memory of massive death was still in the front of everyone’s mind, hardening into resentment and sometimes even hatred. The south was virtually non-existent politically or economically, and searching desperately for a way back in. Along with these things, now living amongst the population were almost