Reconstruction

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“Every man is created equal.” This is one of the most famous lines in the Declaration of Independence written in 1776. But this was obviously not true even a century later in the late 19th century. Only white males in that time (what time period?) had rights and suffrage. The black males were slaves. They were considered to be property with no rights. However this all changed starting with Lincoln’s election, the Civil War, and finally the Reconstruction. Although many obstacles—such as President Johnson, poll taxes, white supremacist groups, Black Codes and financial problems—hindered the freed black men from moving up in society, they still gained suffrage and the ability to own land among other things; this demonstrated an immense radical change from the days African-Americans were considered less than humans with no rights.
The secession of the Southern states emphasized the fact that emancipation of slaves would be possible. Before 1860, the Union was already in a state of impending crisis due to rising sectional tensions and differences. The free-states and slave states constantly argued about the issue of slavery. Each side wanted more representations and therefore wished to gain more states on their side. Many compromises were issued to help alleviate the tensions. Some include the Missouri Compromise and the Compromise of 1850. However, those compromises were just temporary and just stalled the crisis that was soon to come. When Republican Abraham Lincoln won the Presidential election in 1860, it showed many Democratic white Southerners their cause in the Union was hopeless. The free-states and Republicans would soon gain enough power to abolish slavery in the South. The slave states would no longer have power anymore. I...

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... for the prohibition of denying suffrage to any citizen just because of their “race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”
The Congress used its power to override President Johnson’s vetoes and thwart some of his attempts to interfere with blacks’ rights. When the Congress passed an act to extend the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau and gave it powers to nullify work agreements forced on the freedmen under the Black Codes, Johnson vetoed the bill. When the Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which granted citizenship to the blacks of the United States and gave the federal government power to protect citizens’ rights by interfering in state affairs, Johnson vetoed it as well. Nonetheless, the Congress overrode Johnson and passed both bills. The Congress also passed the three Reconstruction bills that were vetoed by Johnson, but the Congress overrode him.

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