RECONSTRUCTION

1865–77, in U.S. history, the period of readjustment following the Civil War. At the end of the Civil War, the defeated South was a ruined land. The physical destruction wrought by the invading Union forces was enormous, and the old social and economic order founded on slavery had collapsed completely, with nothing to replace it. The 11 Confederate states somehow had to be restored to their positions in the Union and provided with loyal governments, and the role of the emancipated slaves in Southern society had to be defined.

Lincoln's Plan

Even before the war ended, President Lincoln began the task of restoration. Motivated by a desire to build a strong Republican party in the South and to end the bitterness engendered by war, he issued (Dec. 8, 1863) a proclamation of amnesty and reconstruction for those areas of the Confederacy occupied by Union armies. It offered pardon, with certain exceptions, to any Confederate who would swear to support the Constitution and the Union. Once a group in any conquered state equal in number to one tenth of that state's total vote in the presidential election of 1860 took the prescribed oath and organized a government that abolished slavery, he would grant that government executive recognition.

Lincoln's plan aroused the sharp opposition of the radicals in Congress, who believed it would simply restore to power the old planter aristocracy. They passed (July, 1864) the Wade-Davis Bill, which required 50% of a state's male voters to take an "ironclad" oath that they had never voluntarily supported the Confederacy. Lincoln's pocket veto kept the Wade-Davis Bill from becoming law, and he implemented his own plan. By the end of the war it had been tried, not too successfully, in Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Virginia. Congress, however, refused to seat the Senators and Representatives elected from those states, and by the time of Lincoln's assassination the President and Congress were at a stalemate.

Johnson's Plan

Lincoln's successor, Andrew Johnson, at first pleased the radicals by publicly attacking the planter aristocracy and insisting that the rebellion must be punished. His amnesty proclamation (May 29, 1865) was more severe than Lincoln's; it disenfranchised all former military and civil officers of the Confederacy and all those who owned property worth $20,000 or more and made their estates liable to confiscation. The obvious intent was to shift political control in the South from the old planter aristocracy to the small farmers and artisans, and it promised to accomplish a revolution in Southern society.

With Congress in adjournment from April to Dec., 1865, Johnson put his plan into operation. Under provisional governors appointed by him, the Southern states held conventions that voided or repealed their ordinances of secession, abolished slavery, and (except South Carolina) repudiated Confederate debts. Their newly elected legislatures (except Mississippi) ratified the Thirteenth Amendment guaranteeing freedom for blacks. By the end of 1865 every ex-Confederate state except Texas had reestablished civil government.

The control of white over black, however, seemed to be restored, as each of the newly elected state legislatures enacted statutes severely limiting the freedom and rights of the blacks. These laws, known as black codes, restricted the ability of blacks to own land and to work as free laborers and denied them most of the civil and political rights enjoyed by whites. Many of the offices in the new governments, moreover, were won by disenfranchised Confederate leaders, and the President, rather than ordering new elections, granted pardons on a large scale.

Early Congressional Legislation

An outraged Northern public believed that the fruits of victory were being lost by Johnson's lenient policy. When Congress convened (Dec. 4, 1865) it refused to seat the Southern representatives. Johnson responded by publicly attacking Republican leaders and vetoing their Reconstruction measures. His tactics drove the moderates into the radical camp. The Civil Rights Act (Apr. 9, 1866), designed to protect African Americans from legislation such as the black codes, and the Freedmen's Bureau Bill (July 16), extending the life of that organization (see Freedmen's Bureau), were both passed over Johnson's veto. Doubts as to the constitutionality of the Civil Rights Act led the radicals to incorporate (June, 1866) most of its provisions in the Fourteenth Amendment (ratified 1868).

The newly created Joint Committee on Reconstruction reported (Apr. 28, 1866) that the ex-Confederate states were in a state of civil disorder, and hence, had not held valid elections. It also maintained that Reconstruction was a congressional, not an executive, function. The radicals solidified their position by winning the elections of 1866. When every Southern state (except Tennessee) refused to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment and protect the rights of its black citizens, the stage was set for more severe measures.

The Reconstruction Acts

On Mar. 2, 1867, Congress enacted the Reconstruction Act, which, supplemented later by three related acts, divided the South (except Tennessee) into five military districts in which the authority of the army commander was supreme. Johnson continued to oppose congressional policy, and when he insisted on the removal of the radical Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton, in defiance of the Tenure of Office Act, the House impeached him (Feb., 1868). The radicals in the Senate fell one vote short of convicting him (May), but by this time Johnson's program had been effectively scuttled.

Under the terms of the Reconstruction Acts, new state constitutions were written in the South. By Aug., 1868, six states (Arkansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida) had been readmitted to the Union, having ratified the Fourteenth Amendment as required by the first Reconstruction Act. The four remaining unreconstructed states—Virginia, Mississippi, Texas, and Georgia—were readmitted in 1870 after ratifying the Fourteenth Amendment as well as the Fifteenth Amendment, which guaranteed the black man's right to vote.

The Radical Republican Governments in the South

The radical Republican governments in the South attempted to deal constructively with the problems left by the Civil War and the abolition of slavery. Led by so-called carpetbaggers (Northerners who settled in the South) and scalawags (Southern whites in the Republican party) and freedmen, they began to rebuild the Southern economy and society. Agricultural production was restored, roads rebuilt, a more equitable tax system adopted, and schooling extended to blacks and poor whites. The freedmen's civil and political rights were guaranteed, and blacks were able to participate in the political and economic life of the South as full citizens for the first time.

The bitterness engendered by the Civil War remained, however, and most Southern whites objected strongly to the former slaves' new role in society. Organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan arose. Their acts of violence kept African Americans and white Republicans from voting, and gradually the radical Republican governments were overthrown. Their collapse was hastened by the death of the old radical leaders in Congress, such as Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner, and by the revelation of internal corruption in the radical Republican governments; the Grant administration was compelled to lessen its support of them because of growing criticism in the North of corruption in the federal government itself.

Reconstruction's End

By 1876 only Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana remained under Republican domination. The Republican presidential candidate that year, Rutherford B. Hayes, promised to alleviate conditions in the South, but the feeling there had already led to the formation of the "solid South" in support of his Democratic opponent, Samuel J. Tilden. In those three states the presidential contest was the occasion for a determined effort to throw off Republican rule, and on their electoral votes (and on one disputed electoral vote in Oregon) hung the fate of the famous disputed election of 1876. It is practically certain that at least one of the three gave a majority, and thus the presidency, to Tilden, but two sets of returns were sent in from each of the three states. A specially constituted electoral commission (composed of eight Republicans and seven Democrats) accepted the Republican returns, and Hayes was given the presidency.

Reconstruction officially ended as all federal troops were withdrawn from the South. White rule was restored, and black people were over time deprived of many civil and political rights and their economic position remained depressed. The radicals' hopes for a basic reordering of the social and economic structure of the South, beyond the abolition of slavery, died. The results, instead, were the one-party "solid South" and increased racial bitterness.

Bibliography

The literature on the Reconstruction is extensive and has shown sharp changes in interpretation. The first major historical writing on the period was done early in the 20th cent. It reflected the rising tide of nationalism that followed the Spanish-American War and incorporated the then current assumptions of black racial inferiority. Reconstruction was portrayed as a tragic era during which vindictive, scheming, radical Republicans imposed harsh military rule on a vanquished South and supported corrupt state governments dominated by unscrupulous carpetbaggers, scalawags, and uneducated freedmen. Typical examples of this school of historiography are J. W. Burgess, Reconstruction and the Constitution (1902, repr. 1970); W. A. Dunning. Reconstruction, Political and Economic (1907, repr. 1962); W. L. Fleming, The Sequel of Appomattox (1919, repr. 1921); C. G. Bowers, The Tragic Era (1929, repr. 1962); and E. M. Coulter, The South During Reconstruction (1947).

The first major attack upon this interpretation came from W. E. B. Du Bois in Black Reconstruction (1935, repr. 1969). It stimulated a complete rethinking of the meaning of Reconstruction. The old Burgess-Dunning school of thought was revised and to a large extent discredited. The moral idealism of the radicals has been recognized and their sincere concern for the rights of the freedmen applauded. Historians agree that the radical state governments were no more corrupt than their predecessors and successors, and that they made notable contributions toward restoring a devastated Southern economy, protecting the rights of freedmen, and extending public education to whites and blacks alike.

Some of the best examples of revisionist writing are C. V. Woodward, Reunion and Reaction (2d ed. 1956, repr. 1966); J. H. Franklin, Reconstruction (1961); W. R. Brock, An American Crisis (1963); K. M. Stampp, The Era of Reconstruction (1965); J. P. Shenton, ed., The Reconstruction (1963); K. M. Stampp and L. F. Litwack, ed., Reconstruction: An Anthology of Revisionist Writings (1969); R. Cruden, The Negro in Reconstruction (1969); H. L. Trefousse, Reconstruction: America's First Effort at Racial Democracy (1971); E. L. Thornbrough, comp., Black Reconstructionists (1972); LaWanda and J. H. Cox, Reconstruction, the Negro, and the New South (1973); E. Foner, Reconstruction (1988); E. L. McKitrick, Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction (1960, repr. 1988); R. N. Current, Those Terrible Carpetbaggers: A Reinterpretation (1989).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...constitutional accom- plishments of Reconstruction. The Norths attention was on its...Johnson, Grant, and the Politics of Reconstruction (New York: Columbia University Press...in William Gillette, Retreat from Reconstruction, 1869-1879 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana...
5.3. Comparative Reconstruction of Syntax 104 5.4. Reconstruction and the Lexicon 109 6. Issues in Comparative Reconstruction 122 6.1. Introduction 122 6.2. The Tree Model 122 6.3. The Wave Model 128 6.4. The Uniformity of the...
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...Carl H. Moneyhon, Republicanism in Reconstruction Texas Austin: University of Texas...12. Carrier, "Texas during the Reconstruction", pp. 250-52. For more on Evans...111-49. 14. "Journal of the Reconstruction Convention . . . 1868", 2 vols...
...34) to Emancipation and Reconstruction. A volume of essays on the...history of the Civil War and Reconstruction is in preparation under the...Companion to the Civil War and Reconstruction. Expected to appear in late...
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...Rights to Govern Lives in Postdisaster Reconstruction Processes. by Jane Krishnadas Natural...development worker in the postearthquake reconstruction processes in Maharashtra India, during...in the postearthquake Maharashtra reconstruction process. I suggest that this formula...
Mountaineer reconstruction: blacks in the political reconstruction of West Virginia. by Stephen D. Engle 10 Journal...Virginia," Yale Review, p. 41; Gerofsky, "Reconstruction in West Virginia," West Virginia History, p...
Reconstruction in Post-taliban Afghanistan: Women...needs and priorities of women and the reconstruction of the ruined education system in post-Taliban Afghanistan. The countrys reconstruction and short- and long-term development...
Stabilization and Reconstruction in Afghanistan: Are PRTs a Model...developed the concept of Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) to spread the...for future stabilization and reconstruction operations. Representatives...
...Footprint: Stakeholders in Afghan Reconstruction. by Bas Rietjens , Myriame Bollen...and stabilization, not after it. Reconstruction is in many ways the essential process...stabilization." (1) The necessities of reconstruction have frequently drawn the International...
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Provincial Reconstruction Teams and Security Assistance...The country needed extensive reconstruction in every aspect of society and...provide security for humanitarian and reconstruction efforts. Among those calling for...
Income Reconstruction by Charles E. Price , Leonard...application of this skill is income reconstruction. But, the sword cuts both ways...deduction based on a "reasonable reconstruction of his expenditures." The courts...
...First and Second Reconstructions--two moments...arrived for a Third Reconstruction, a renewed national...As the First Reconstruction drew to a close...backward." Both Reconstructions were times of...of the Second Reconstruction. But separate...Indeed, both Reconstructions foundered, in...
...Acres and a Mule: the Ruined Hope of Reconstruction by Danielle Alexander "RECONSTRUCTION WAS A FAILURE, BUT A splendid failure...broken promises. In the end, the goal of Reconstruction-equality before the law for black citizens...
Iraq Reconstruction by Roxana Tiron To recover from serious setbacks in its reconstruction plans for Iraq-caused by growing violence...declining quality of life, have derailed reconstruction efforts. Part of the problem, some argue...
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...for Rebuilding Iraq, Report Says; Reconstruction Efforts Hindered. Byline: Rowan...S.-directed stabilization and reconstruction operations," said Stuart W. Bowen...special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, in a new "lessons learned" report...
Queensland Reconstruction Exemplifies ,Cybest Practice...Bank. Premier and Minister for Reconstruction Anna Bligh said the memorandum...practice in disaster recovery and reconstruction. Cpounds sterlingQueenslands reconstruction...
...Flooding Maps Not Accurate: Resident; Reconstruction Authority Website Maps Miss the Mark...Rothwell has proof that the Queensland Reconstruction Authority has posted data on its website...see picture). But the Queensland Reconstruction flood maps on their website show that...
Flood Reconstruction to Boost Economy: Expert. Byline: Eoin Blackwell of AAP RECONSTRUCTION work after the Queensland floods could...praised the Federal Governments plan to fund reconstruction though spending cuts, but is uncertain...
...Making Cents of the Money for Reconstruction. ONE of the frustrations I...after a disaster event. The reconstruction task before us is enormous...put $2 billion towards the reconstruction effort. Much of the money...
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...Congress enacted the Reconstruction Act, which, supplemented...Under the terms of the Reconstruction Acts, new state constitutions...as required by the first Reconstruction Act. The four remaining...federal government itself. Reconstructions End By 1876 only Florida...
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION (RFC), former U.S. government agency, created in 1932 by the administration of Herbert Hoover. Its...
INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT (IBRD), independent specialized agency of the United Nations, with headquarters at Washington, D.C.; one...
...twofold: first, his scholarly studies of Reconstruction led the way to a new interpretation of...not only wrote two superb studies of Reconstruction Essays on the Civil War and Reconstruction (1898, rev. ed. 1904) and Reconstruction...
...revised in 1875 76 as a result of Reconstruction experiences; it has been amended...the last) surrender of the war. Reconstruction and Agrarian Revolt In May, 1865...Andrew Johnson applied his plan of Reconstruction to the state. The radical Republicans...
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