Andrew Johnson’s presidential plan for Reconstruction, Returned land, pardoned Confederates, loyalty oaths, John Wilkes Booth’s motive, Believed killing Lincoln would revive Confederacy, Enforcement Acts, Passed to stop Klan violence, Poll tax, Fee required before voter registration, Reconstruction Acts, Required Black male suffrage and equal rights, Election of 1876 dispute, Democrats accused Republicans of blocking white voters, Opposition to Johnson’s pardons, Confederate officers should be punished, Nez Perce War, Chief Joseph fled toward Canada, captured, Freedmen’s Bureau, Provided education, food, labor assistance, Sharecropping, Trapped many African Americans in debt, Lincoln’s Reconstruction goal, Restore Union and move beyond slavery, Panic of 1873, Caused by railroad speculation and risky loans, Hayes’s Southern policy, Removed federal troops from the South, Black Codes, Restricted freedpeople’s freedom and labor, Scalawag, White Southerner allied with Republicans, Decline of Reconstruction, Convict leasing expanded, Black voting restricted, 13th Amendment, Abolished slavery except as punishment, Black Republicans during Reconstruction, Supported party backing voting rights, Medicine Lodge Treaty, Moved Plains tribes to reservations, Reconstruction-era media, Spread stereotypes, weakened equality support, Exoduster movement, Migration seeking safety from Southern violence, Section 3 of 14th Amendment, Supported by Radical Republicans, Capital in the New South, Financed railroads, factories, urban growth, Pacific Railroad Act, Helped fund Transcontinental Railroad, Chinese immigrants in 1882, Most lived in California, Coal mining in late 1800s, Powered factories and steam engines, Northern reaction after Panic of 1873, Interest in freedpeople’s rights declined.

Reconstruction Exploros

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