CHAPTER 17 RECONSTRUCTION NORTH AND SOUTH

CHAPTER 17 – RECONSTRUCTION: NORTH AND SOUTH
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National Banking Act
Transcontinental Railroad
Morrill Land Grant Act
Southern Economic Issues
Legally Free, Socially Bound
Martin Delaney
Freedman’s Bureau
Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
Ten Percent Plan
Radical Republicans
Wade-Davis Bill
John Wilkes Booth
Andrew Johnson
Johnson’s Plan
“Black Codes”
Thaddeus Stevens
Radical Republicans
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Civil Rights Act (1866)
14th Amendment
“Congressional Reconstruction” Acts
Tenure of Office Act
Impeachment of Johnson
Salmon P. Chase
15th Amendment
Freed Slaves
African Americans in Southern Politics
“Carpetbaggers”
“Scalawags”
Election of 1868
Jay Gould and James Fisk
Credit Mobilier Scandal
Ku Klux Klan
Election of 1872
Compromise of 1877
The End of Reconstruction
1. What were the different approaches to the Reconstruction of the Confederate states?
2. How did white southerners respond to the end of the old order in the South?
3. To what extent did blacks function as citizens in the reconstructed South?
4. What were the main issues in national politics in the 1870s?
5. Why did Reconstruction end in 1877?