Reconstruction was a
period in U.S. history during and after the American Civil War in which attempts
were made to solve the political, social, and economic problems arising from the
readmission to the Union of the 11 Confederate states that had seceded at or
before the outbreak of war. As early as 1862,
Pres. Abraham Lincoln had appointed provisional military governors for
Louisiana, Tennessee, and North Carolina. The following year, initial steps were
taken to reestablish governments in newly occupied states in which at least 10
percent of the voting population had taken the prescribed oath of allegiance.
Aware that the presidential plan omitted any provision for social or economic
reconstruction, the Radical Republicans in Congress resented such a lenient
political arrangement under solely executive jurisdiction. As a result, the
stricter Wade-Davis Bill was passed in 1864 but pocket vetoed by the
President. After Lincoln's
assassination (April 1865), Pres. Andrew Johnson further alienated Congress by
continuing Lincoln's moderate policies. The Fourteenth Amendment, defining
national citizenship so as to include blacks, passed Congress in June 1866 and
was ratified, despite rejection by most Southern states (July 28, 1868). In
response to Johnson's intemperate outbursts against the opposition as well as to
several reactionary developments in the South (e.g., race riots and passage of
the repugnant black codes severely restricting rights of blacks), the North gave
a smashing victory to the Radical Republicans in the 1866 congressional
election. That victory
launched the era of congressional Reconstruction (usually called Radical
Reconstruction), which lasted 10 years starting with the Reconstruction Acts of
1867. Under that legislation, the 10 remaining Southern states (Tennessee had
been readmitted to the Union in 1866) were divided into five military districts;
and, under supervision of the U.S. Army, all were readmitted between 1868 and
1870. Each state had to accept the Fourteenth or, if readmitted after its
passage, the Fifteenth Constitutional Amendment, intended to ensure civil rights
of the freedmen. The newly created state governments were generally Republican
in character and were governed by political coalitions of blacks, carpetbaggers
(Northerners who had gone into the South), and scalawags (Southerners who
collaborated with the blacks and carpetbaggers). The Republican governments of
the former Confederate states were seen by most Southern whites as artificial
creations imposed from without, and the conservative element in the region
remained hostile to them. Southerners particularly resented the activities.

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