Lesson 3: Reconstruction and Southern Society Flashcards
Carpetbagger Definition
an uncomplimentary nickname for a Northerner who went to the South after the Civil War
Hiram Rhodes Revels Definition
(1827–1901) the nation’s first African American senator
Ku Klux Klan Definition
a secret society organized in the South after the Civil War to reassert white supremacy by means of violence
Scalawag Definition
a white Southerner who supported the Republicans during Reconstruction
Sharecropper Definition
a person who rents a plot of land from another person and farms it in exchange for a share of the crop
How did Reconstruction shift the power divisions in politics?
Before the Civil War, a small group of rich planters had dominated southern politics. During Reconstruction, however, new groups tried to reshape southern politics. The state governments created during Radical Reconstruction were different from any governments the South had known before. The old leaders had lost much of their influence. Three groups stepped in to replace them.
Who were the three new political groups in the South?
White Southern Republicans, Northerners in the South, and African Americans
What were the believes and ideologies of the New Southern Political Group the White Southern Republicans, also called scalawags?
One group to emerge consisted of white southerners who supported the new Republican governments. Many were businesspeople who had opposed secession in 1860 (shows that they supported unification). They wanted to forget the war and get on with rebuilding the South. Many whites in the South felt that any southerner who helped the Republicans was a traitor. They called the white southern Republicans scalawags, a word used for small, scruffy horses.
What were the believes and ideologies of the New Southern Political Group the Northerners in the South, also known as carpetbaggers?
Northerners who came to the South after the war were another important force. White southerners accused the new arrivals of hoping to get rich from the South’s misery. Southerners jested that these northerners were in such a hurry to move south that they had time only to fling a few clothes into cheap suitcases, or carpetbags. As a result, they became known as carpetbaggers. In fact, northerners went south for various reasons. A few did hope to profit as the South was being rebuilt. Many more, however, were Union soldiers who had grown to love the South’s rich land. Others, both white and black, were teachers, ministers, and reformers who sincerely wanted to help the freedmen.
What were the believes and ideology of the New Southern Political Group the African Americans? Who was Hiram Rhodes Revels, and what was his influence? Who was Blanche K. Bruce?
African Americans were the third major new group in southern politics. Before the war, they had no voice in southern government. During Reconstruction, they not only voted in large numbers, but they also ran for and were elected to public office in the South. African Americans became sheriffs, mayors, and legislators in the new state and local governments. Sixteen African Americans were elected to Congress between 1869 and 1880. Two African Americans, both representing Mississippi, served in the Senate. Hiram Rhodes Revels, a clergyman and teacher, became the nation’s first black senator in 1870. He completed the unfinished term of former Confederate president Jefferson Davis. In 1874, Blanche K. Bruce became the first African American to serve a full term in the Senate. Revels’ election had a powerful impact. It was an important victory for African American politicians. He served on the Committee on Education and Labor, where he opposed legislation that would segregate, or separate, schools for African Americans and whites. He also promoted opportunities for African American workers.
What was the true extent of the Freedmen’s political influence, which was covered by the whites?
Freedmen had less political influence than many whites claimed, however. Only in South Carolina did African Americans win a majority in one house of the state legislature. No state elected a black governor.
What was the goal of Conservatives during Reconstruction? What was their ideology?
Most white southerners who had held power before the Civil War resisted Reconstruction. These Conservatives resented the changes imposed by Congress and enforced by the military. They wanted the South to change as little as possible. Conservatives were willing to let African Americans vote and hold a few offices. Still, they were determined that real power would remain in the hands of whites. This tension caused social problems in the South during Reconstruction that impacted free African Americans and Conservatives.
How did white planters and farmers try to decrease the Freedmen’s influence? What was the ideology of these farmers and what did Southern senators say?
A few wealthy planters tried to force African Americans back onto plantations. Many small farmers and laborers wanted the government to take action against freedmen, who now competed with them for land and power. Most of these white southerners were Democrats. They declared war on anyone who cooperated with the Republicans. “This is a white man’s country,” declared one southern senator, “and white men must govern it.”
Who were the Ku Klux Klan and what was their main reason for forming? What terrible deeds did they perform to get their point across?
Some white southerners formed secret societies to help them regain power. The most dangerous was the Ku Klux Klan, or KKK. The Klan worked to keep African Americans and white Republicans out of office. Dressed in white robes and hoods to hide their identities, Klansmen rode at night to the homes of African American voters, shouting threats and burning wooden crosses. When threats did not work, the Klan turned to violence. Klan members murdered hundreds of African Americans and their white allies.
What was the social and political impact of the Ku Klux Klan?
Many moderate southerners condemned the violence of the Klan. Yet, they could do little to stop the Klan’s reign of terror. Freedmen turned to the federal government for help. In Kentucky, African American voters wrote to Congress:
“We believe you are not familiar with the Ku Klux Klan’s riding nightly over the country spreading terror wherever they go by robbing, whipping, and killing our people without provocation.”
—Records of the U.S. Senate, April 11, 1871
In 1870, Congress made it a crime to use force to keep people from voting. Although Klan activities decreased, the threat of violence remained. Some African Americans continued to vote and hold office, but others were frightened away from the ballot box.