With the death of Abraham Lincoln in 1865, a new president sought to reunite the nation at the end of the Civil war. The presence of Andrew Jackson in the white House took the Republican Party and the newly freed slaves in directions that shaped the way the North made policy toward the defeated south. The process became known as reconstruction, and it remained one of the most controversial periods in all of American history. During this period of reconstruction, was set out to change the south and better the lives of the white and black people that lived there. Upon President Lincoln’s assassination, the nation looked to the new presidents for leadership. Andrew Johnson was unknown to most political insiders, and promised to pursue Lincoln’s …show more content…
Johnson enjoyed a brief period to enact his vision of how to return the South to the union congress was not in session at the time of Lincoln’s death and would not be for several months. Johnson used the opportunity to implement his plan of reunion. In “Presidential Reconstruction” Johnson offered amnesty to former confederates who took an oath of loyalty to the union, restoring their political and civil rights and immunizing them against the seizure of their property and prosecution for treason.( Waldstreicher 2002) By 1866, Johnson granted more than seven thousand pardons to wealthy southerners and confederate senior officers who applied individually for pardons. Johnson plan for political reunion left out any provision for black voting or participation in politics. His plan would give the South even greater national power than it had held before because the entire African American …show more content…
All the southern states except Tennessee, which had been readmitted to the Union after it ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, were divided into five military districts. Once order had been instituted, the state’s constitution had to elect conventions to draw up new constitutions, but those constitutions had to accept the Fourteenth Amendment and provide universal manhood suffrage.( Waldstreicher 2002) Once a majority of the state’s citizens and both houses of the national congress had approved the new constitution, the state could be readmitted to the Union. In order to assure that Andrew Johnson did not undermine the plan , which soon became known as “Radical Reconstruction “ , Congress sought to curb the Presidents power. With no threat of Johnson’s veto after the 1866 elections, the Republicans could do much as they wanted. Congress decreed that it could call itself into special session. It limited the president’s authority as commander in chief of the army, and in the Tenure of Office Act, it prevented him from removing officials who had been confirmed by the Senate. Johnson, characteristically, did not accept such restrictions of his power. When he violated the Tenure Office Act by removing Secretary of War Edwin Stanton in the summer of 1867, many in congress decided that Johnson warranted impeachment .After word of the Reconstruction Act circulated in the spring and summer, both black and white men claimed
The reconstruction after the Civil War had just begun. Andrew Johnson took over and created a Reconstruction Plan. Johnson's plan included almost total pardon for ex-Confederates, restoration for states,approving new southern governments and preserving Black Codes. The congress, which was greatly dominated by republicans, opposed Andrew Johnson's plan for reconstruction.
Before it even began the Reconstruction was a political battle and President Johnson didn’t add well to the mix of the battle. “A lonely, stubborn man, he was intolerant of criticism and unable to compromise” (Foner, p. 579). Many people believed he was unfit for the political world and he wasn’t ready to be our president. He was a very racist man and he believed that African Americans played absolutely no part in the Reconstruction and believed they had no rights what so ever. The beginning of the Presidential Reconstruction (1865 – 1867) “Johnson offered a pardon (which restored political and property rights, except for slaves) to nearly all white southerners who took an oath of allegiance to the Union” (Foner, p. 580). Many people thought
After President Lincoln’s assassination his Vice President Andrew Johnson became the new President and began his own version of reconstruction. Although it was common knowledge at the time President Johnson did not like southern planter elites, he was surprisingly lenient towards them. He even blocked radicals in Congress attempts to pass punitive legislation on the Confederate states (ushistory.org, 2008).
Abraham Lincoln then made it clear that there needed to be preliminary plans for a postwar reconstruction. Union armies capturing larger sections of the South, some state ready to have governments built for the slaves. The plan was considering costs of war, the proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction along with it Lincoln seized the initiative for the Reconstruction from Congress. A few Radical Republicans assumed the plan was way too easy, for that matter others accepted it due to the President's leadership and prestige. The assassination of Lincoln on the date of April 1865m lead to disagreements over the postwar reconstruction policy, then it led to a heated battle between the new President Andrew Johnson and
Johnson issued thirteen though sand five hundred Presidential pardons to those he earlier hoped to keep out. There were many ex-Confederates who were elected to Congress. Also the state legislatures in the south demoted blacks to a second class status, and this was known as the Black Codes. These codes states blacks were not allowed to vote, be on juries, testify against whites, could not interracially marry, and it was most unfair in Mississippi and South Carolina. Johnson like Lincoln wanted to restore the Union in as little time as possible.
During Reconstruction there were massive changes in America’s culture, economy, and politics. Reconstruction for Lincoln was supposed to be a time for union and forgiveness. Who knows what would've happened if Lincoln could of cared out his plans, but Andrew Johnson took over and his plan for Reconstruction was very different. He believed the South had no right to succeed to begin with. He believed that the blacks should have no part in Reconstruction because today he's known as a racist. Andrew Johnson made sure to establish his all white government which to me looks like he's just copying the all white confederate government like before.
Instead he believed in a strict construction of the Constitution in which the states’ rights were more important than the federal government having more control, and therefore this did not include the rights of secession. Likewise, when Congress convened again in the year 1866, Johnson vetoed the legislation that was sent up to help former slaves be treated equally. Unfortunately for Johnson the Radical Republicans were able to obtain enough votes, and pass the legislation over his veto; which is also the first time that Congress was able to override a President on an important bill. This bill that Johnson had vetoed was the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which established freed slaves and blacks as American citizens, and forbade discrimination against
Reconstruction in the South took place between the years 1865-1877, just after the Civil War, however many challenges were encountered which included opposition from the whites and Democrats who viewed reconstruction was going against their interests of owning and utilizing slaves. The Republican party began to split and thus, reconstruction received little support. Reconstruction policies started from the liberation of slaves to presidential plans before changing to radical and then military rebuilding. The first reconstruction policy changed after Abraham Lincoln’s assassination with President Johnson’s restoration plan calling for the ratification of the 13th amendment to end slavery. President Johnson turned to radical reconciliation
The Reconstruction Era in the United States was a time from 1865-1877 when the government made the attempt to revitalize the South after the Civil War. This movement was begun by President Abraham Lincoln and continued after his assassination by his successor, Andrew Johnson. The focus of this era was on an economic, political, and social level in the South. Numerous bills and acts were passed throughout the years to assist in strengthening and enforcing rules that would essentially turn back the clock for the South. Although, at the time, this was thought to be an excellent way to reform the nation, many disagree and believe it was a failure until World War II and after President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal.
After the American Civil War in which attempts were made to solve the political, social, and economic factors arising from the readmission to the Union of the Confederate States that had seceded at or before the outbreak of war. President Abraham Lincoln planned to readmit states with a criterion in which 10% of the voters had pledged loyalty to the Union. This lenient approach was opposed by the Radical Republicans, who favored the measures passed in the Wade-Davis Bill. Andrew Johnson became the President after Lincoln’s assassination in 1865. He wanted to keep it simple and easy to restore the local rule. So, he took over and continued with the moderate policies of Lincoln, but due to the enactment in the South of the black codes and the demand for stricter legislation in the North resulted in victories of Radical Republicans
After the death of President Lincoln’s assassination, President Johnson abled himself to take on the responsibility of Reconstruction a possibility. America: A Narrative History states: “Andrew Johnson supported Lincoln’s policies, while a peace wing of the party preferred an end to the fighting, even if that meant risking the Union.” (America, 682) He was to take the concepts of reconstruction from Lincoln but added a more
Andrew Johnson, Abraham Lincoln’s successor, fought with Congress over Reconstruction policies. Johnson imagined a lenient and rapid “restoration” of the South to the Union rather than the fundamental “reconstruction” that Republican congressmen favored (Norton, 14 intro). The president and Republican congressional leadership disagreed and by the time it was all over, Congress impeached the president, enfranchised freedmen, and gave them a role in reconstructing the South (Norton, 14 intro). The nation then also adopted the 14th and 15th Amendments ensuring equal protection of citizenship, law, and universal manhood suffrage.
Presidential Reconstruction under Johnson readmitted the southern states using Lincoln’s Ten-Percent Plan and granted all southerners full pardons, including thousands of wealthy planters and former Confederate officials. Johnson also ordered the Freedmen’s Bureau to return all confiscated lands to their original owners. While Congress was in recess, Johnson approved new state constitutions for secessionist states and declared Reconstruction complete in December 1865. In 1866 the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed which granted newly emancipated blacks the right to sue, the right to serve on juries, and several other legal
Something that President Johnson did to start the period of Reconstruction was to pardon all Confederates soldiers if they plead loyalty and alliance to the Union. No one was held accountable for what happened, one man was murder. Also he demanded that the states in the south abolish slavery and change their constitution in order to be accepted into the United States. Those were Andrew Johnson terms for Reconstructions. Not very efficient because it leaves all these defeated soldiers, filled with anger and violence in the streets. Then Congress tried to pass the Civil Rights bill and the 14th amendment which
To the Radical Republicans, Johnson's plan seemed no better than Lincoln's because it failed to address the needs of former slaves in three prominent areas: land, voting rights, and protection under the law. Confederates states, however, readily committed to the conditions put forth in the Presidential Reconstruction plan, and were readmitted to the Union. A few years later, the Reconstruction Act of 1867 was passed, which did not recognize the governments formed under Lincoln and Johnson's plans. Through the Reconstruction Act, Tennessee was the only former Confederate State recognized as having been readmitted to the Union because it had ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. In order for the rest of the former Confederate states to be readmitted to the Union through the Reconstruction Act, each state had to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment, also. The Republicans introduced the Fifteenth Amendment after the election of 1868 because they feared that Pro-Confederate Southern whites might try to place limits on black suffrage. In order to prevent this, the Fifteenth Amendment states that no one can be kept from voting because of "race, color, or previous condition of servitude." Through the different plans that were proposed by the three different Presidents in office during the Reconstruction period, the Thirteenth,