Causes Of Radical Reconstruction

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Part One 1. Reconstruction During the American Civil War, the Radical Republicans were a branch of the Republican party that believed in the same political rights for blacks and whites and that Confederate leaders should be punished for their crimes. Their main goals were “voting rights for African American men as well as the redistribution of southern plantation lands to freed slaves.” The Radical Republicans had another motive to accomplish. Their motive was to strengthen federal supervision of the Confederacy. The Radical Republicans argued “that the Confederates had broken their contract with the union when they seceded and should be treated as ‘conquered provinces’ subject to congressional supervision.” Thaddeus Stevens, a Radical …show more content…

President Johnson believed that the emancipation of blacks was the means to break down the planter aristocracy, not to empower blacks. He saw no reason to punish the South as losing their slaves and labor force was punishment enough. As our textbook notes, “Johnson’s views, combined with a lack of political savvy and skill, left him unable to work constructively with congressional Republicans, even the moderates who constituted the majority” Another reason Radical Reconstruction failed was because in the early 1870s, growing economic problems grew stronger as white Northerners became more irritated with the struggles to protect the rights of freed people, as Northerners felt they had done enough for black Southerners. As Hewitt and Lawson suggest, “More and more northern whites came to believe that any debt owed to black people for northern complicity in the sin of slavery had been wiped out by the blood shed during the Civil War.” This led the nation to shift from focusing on social matters to economic matters. A third reason why Radical Reconstruction failed was because focusing on social matters opened the door to legislation limiting the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. United States v. Cruikshank (1876), for example, ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment protected blacks against abuses by the government, but not from private groups. After that case more and more legislation was passed, putting a stop to Radical Reconstruction

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