1.1 Johnson Flashcards
What party was Johnson from?
Democrat
When did Johnson become president?
April 1865 after the assassination of Lincoln.
What were initial reactions and attitudes when Johnson first became president?
-Regarded as the right man for the job.
-He was respected for his decision to stay on in Congress after Tennessee seceded from the Union in 1861 and was the only Southern senator to do so.
-He had served as military governor of Tennessee and was supportive of Lincoln when he himself was vice president.
-He was a supporter of emancipation and a critic of the old plantation-owning Southern elite.
-Radical republicans were hopeful he would bring the change they wanted.
How did Radical Republicans see Johnson’s reconstruction plan?
‘Soft’ towards the Southern states
What was Johnson’s approach to unite the Southern states that had seceded with the Union?
He announced that all Southerners, except Confederate soldiers and the rich plantations owners, would be pardoned if they swore an oath of allegiance to the Union, and he eventually issued approximately 13,000 pardons.
Which 7 Southern states had not yet approved Reconstruction governments by Johnson’s presidency?
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas
What was the result of Johnson’s attempt to reunite the South with the Union?
-It opened the way for state conventions to set up new, lawful state governments, which would then accept the abolition of slavery and renounce the illegal action of breaking away from the Union in 1861
-However, it aroused intense opposition from Republicans
Why was Johnson keen to restore the Southern states as quickly as possible?
Congress was due to reconvene in December 1865 and he would soon face strong opposition from Radical Republicans.
What was Johnson’s approach to the Wade-Davis Bill?
He accepted it but agreed that when each former Confederate state held a convention to revise its own constitution, those attending the convention would be elected by the 1860 white electorate
What were the new Southern state governments like under Johnson?
-They were dominated by the same old Southern elites
-The men elected to represent the Southern states in Congress were mostly former Confederate politicians and military officers
-Also back-tracked on the question of rights for African-Americans and every state brought in ‘black codes’.
-Several states refused to ratify the Constitutional amendment abolishing slavery
What was Johnson’s approach to the new state government?
His original plan was to prosecute Confederate leaders for treason but this was dropped. He wanted to purge the old plantation aristocracy and prevent them from regaining power and influence in state government.
What were the ‘black codes’?
Introduced by new state government to replace the old slave codes, they accepted the very basic rights of freed slaves such as to marry and own property. However, many states imposed segregation and prohibited interracial marriage. Blacks were not allowed to testify in court against whites; blacks also faced great difficulties in gaining economic freedom from work on the plantations.
What were some sections of the Louisiana black codes?
-Blacks weren’t allowed to come within the limits of the town without special permission from employers
-Blacks couldn’t live in the town if they weren’t in regular service of some white person or former owner
-No public meetings of black in the town without permission of the mayor or president of the board of police
-Couldn’t carry weapons without special permission of his employer, in writing, and approved by the mayor or president of the board of police
What were the reactions of Johnson’s forced reunion of the South with the North?
Whilst it was vital to reconcile the South to prevent former Confederates from becoming ‘a degraded and debased people’, Johnson had betrayed high hopes of Northern Liberals after victory in the war. He undermined the status of black people in the South and allowed former Confederates back into politics. When Congress reconvened in December 1865, it was dominated by angry Republicans determined to wipe out the black codes and removed former Confederates from power.
What was Johnson’s first use of the veto?
Congress voted to extend the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau for three more years and to strengthen its powers to prosecute offenders guilty of discrimination against freedmen. Johnson vetoed this in February 1866.