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Congressional "Radical" Reconstruction

Phase 2: Congressional “Radical” Reconstruction

  • late 1865-66, Republicans in Congress seized control of Reconstruction

    • some “radicals” supported racial equality

    • most wanted the power of Black southern votes

  • February 1866, Civil Rights Act

    • universal birth rights citizenship (except for most Native Americans)

    • Johnson vetoed, Congress overrode

  • June 1866, the 14th Amendment

    • universal citizenship and equal protection under the law for all native-born or naturalized Americans

    • federal government could enforce over states

    • barred some former CSA officials from holding office

  • 1867, First Reconstruction Act was established

    • dissolved southern state governments

    • divided the region into 5 military districts

      • military governors

      • federal troops on the ground

    • new terms for re-entering the Union:

      • ratify 14th Amendment

      • new state constitutions enfranchising Black men

      • abolish black codes

  • February 1869, 15th Amendment was passed:

    • voting rights regardless of race or previous servitude

    • federal enforcement

  • Johnson obstructed all efforts and narrowly survived his impeachment

“Radical” Reconstruction Results

  • military protection allowed widespread African American voting in South

    • 80% of Republican voters in the South

    • gained Republican control of Congress, state governments, and presidency, especially 1868-74

    • allowed ratification of the 14th and 15th amendments

  • African American men in political office:

    • overall, 1500+ appointed or elected, 1865-77

    • at the federal level:

      • 2 senators

      • 14 representatives

      • 270 in federal patronage positions

    • 1000+ elected to state/local office in the South, including about 800 state legislators

    • state constitutional conventions 1868-69

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Congressional "Radical" Reconstruction

Phase 2: Congressional “Radical” Reconstruction

  • late 1865-66, Republicans in Congress seized control of Reconstruction

    • some “radicals” supported racial equality

    • most wanted the power of Black southern votes

  • February 1866, Civil Rights Act

    • universal birth rights citizenship (except for most Native Americans)

    • Johnson vetoed, Congress overrode

  • June 1866, the 14th Amendment

    • universal citizenship and equal protection under the law for all native-born or naturalized Americans

    • federal government could enforce over states

    • barred some former CSA officials from holding office

  • 1867, First Reconstruction Act was established

    • dissolved southern state governments

    • divided the region into 5 military districts

      • military governors

      • federal troops on the ground

    • new terms for re-entering the Union:

      • ratify 14th Amendment

      • new state constitutions enfranchising Black men

      • abolish black codes

  • February 1869, 15th Amendment was passed:

    • voting rights regardless of race or previous servitude

    • federal enforcement

  • Johnson obstructed all efforts and narrowly survived his impeachment

“Radical” Reconstruction Results

  • military protection allowed widespread African American voting in South

    • 80% of Republican voters in the South

    • gained Republican control of Congress, state governments, and presidency, especially 1868-74

    • allowed ratification of the 14th and 15th amendments

  • African American men in political office:

    • overall, 1500+ appointed or elected, 1865-77

    • at the federal level:

      • 2 senators

      • 14 representatives

      • 270 in federal patronage positions

    • 1000+ elected to state/local office in the South, including about 800 state legislators

    • state constitutional conventions 1868-69