Free at last Pt.3 Flashcards

1
Q

What was the 14th Amendment and when was it proposed and ratified?

A
  • Proposed June 1866
  • Passed July 1868

-Excluded former Confederate leaders from politics

  • Gave all US citizens full and equal protection under the law
  • Defined what constituted a US citizen
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2
Q

Who was considered a citizen after the 14th Amendment?

A
  • Anyone born or naturalised in the USA, making all ex-slaves citizens
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3
Q

What was the Dredd Scott case and when did it occur?

A
  • An 1857 case that deemed slaves/Black Americans could not be classified as citizens of the US
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4
Q

What was the 15th Amendment and when was it passed?

A
  • February 1869
  • Prohibited any federal or state government from depriving any US Citizen of the right to vote on racial grounds
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5
Q

Why was there controversy surrounding the 15th Amendment?

A
  • Made no reference of the right for ex-slaves to hold political office
  • Henry Wilson criticised it as it did not forbid any testing of entitlement, meaning many could be discriminated against on these grounds instead
  • Women’s suffrage was not included
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6
Q

What were the benefits of the 15th Amendment?

A
  • Everywhere in the USA people of any ethnic background could not be denied the right to vote based on that
  • Now entitled ex-slaves to full rights of citizenship
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7
Q

What was the Civil Rights Act and when was it passed?

A
  • March 1875
  • Affirmed the “equality of all men before the law” and prohibited racial discrimination in public places and facilities such as restaurants and public transportation
  • Failed to mention public schools
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8
Q

What and when was the Slaughterhouse decision?

A
  • US supreme court in 1873 declared that the 14th Amendment/Civil rights act applied only to cases concerning national (federal) citizenship such as interstate travel and not to those concerning state citizenship and thus any cases concerning that
  • Meant that the federal government was unable to protect black Americans’ rights in state jurisdiction
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9
Q

How did the Supreme court undermine much of what had been achieved during reconstruction?

A
  • Slaughterhouse decision
  • Many breakthroughs made during reconstruction were invalidated due to the ruling on the United States vs Reese Case in 1876
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10
Q

Of what importance was the Reese vs United States case and when did it happen?

A
  • 1876
  • US Supreme court ruled that the 15th Amendment did not give anyone the right to vote after a Kentucky official denied Black men their right to vote
  • Made the 15th Amendment difficult to enforce and later in 1883 the civil rights act
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11
Q

How and when did reconstruction come to an end?

A
  • Ended in 1877 after Rutherford B Hayes was elected president
  • Much of the Radical Republicans’ work had been overturned or overruled by those with heavy prejudices, and none could oppose them as democrats now had equal and greater numbers
  • Deaths of the Radical republican leaders Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner
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12
Q

Did ex-slaves have any presence in politics?

A
  • Hundreds attended conventions and joined union leagues to aid the republican party
  • By 1867 there was presence and influence of black delegates in politics
  • In state government around 600 ex-slaves served as legislators
  • Only 2 black senators in the period, with around 14 congressmen
  • Many accused of being under the influence of carpetbaggers and scalawags
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13
Q

Was Black presence in politics seen as a positive thing?

A
  • Many not racist people saw it as a great show of freedoms and reform
  • New reconstructed state governments required radical reform that cost a lot of money - so the government was accused of financial incompetence. Much of this was blamed on black representatives
  • Southerners saw the presence of black people in politics as a reason for failure during reconstruction
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14
Q

What were some of the reasons members of the confederacy might’ve been angry with the government, union and Black Americans?

A
  • Loss of 25% of the white adult male population and many states had been devastated by the war
  • Economy was bad and the Southerners faced losses of around 2 billion due to the abolition of slavery
  • Black Americans now given “equal” rights
  • Confederacy put under military occupation with many of their perceived freedoms violated from 1867 onwards
  • Fear of black domination and exploitation by carpetbaggers/scalawags
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15
Q

When was the KKK started, what were its goals and what did it evolve into?

A
  • 24th December 1865
  • Former confederate soldiers formed the Ku Klux Klan (KKK, derived from the Greek for circle and coined to mean “white racial brotherhood”)
  • Apparently stood for maintaining chivalry, humanity, mercy and patriotism
  • Began as a group causing light intimidation of black people however changed quickly into a terrorist organisation with demonstrations and executions
  • Elaborate costumes, rituals and titles soon were added
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16
Q

Who were the KKK’s leaders and what other similar groups existed?

A
  • Nathan Forrest was the “Grand Wizard” who had been one of the most feared confederate generals. John Gordon also had been a confederate general
  • Knights of the White Camelia in Louisiana
  • Knights of the Rising Sun in Texas
  • Red Shirts in South Carolina
  • White Line in Mississippi
  • White leagues

All had the same concept of keeping to the pre-civil war notion that Blacks were inferior to whites

17
Q

What were Black Americans accused of by the KKK and who/how were they targeted?

A
  • Colonel de Blanc of the Knights of the white Camelia in 1868 stated he believed that they were responsible for crimes against white people such as arson, rape and murder
  • Targeted Black Americans, Carpetbaggers, members of the republican party, Scalawags and members of the federal government
18
Q

What were some of the dated atrocities committed by the KKK?

A

1970
- Murdered 3 Scalawag members of the Georgia Legislature, driving 10 more from their homes

  • Mob of armed white men attacked a republican party rally, killing 4 black men and wounding 54 others
  • Autumn after the 15th amendment, nearly every black school and church in Tuskegee Alabama was burned

1871
- 500 masked men laid siege to Union County jail and lynched 8 black prisoners

19
Q

What were some of the common practices of white supremacist groups?

A
  • Beatings, Arson and murder
  • Lynchings increased after 1865 and became a regular occurrence after the reconstruction years and particularly during times of relative equality such as the 1868 elections where 1300 white and black voters were murdered
  • Lynchings decreased during times when the government enforced martial law or acts that put groups like the KKK at risk
  • Between 1868 and 1876 lynchings stood at 50-100 a year