Reconstruction Dbq

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After four hard-fought years of the deadliest war on American soil, the Union, led by President Abraham Lincoln, defeated the Confederacy, led by President-elect Jefferson Davis. The victory of the Union resolved the matter regarding the freedom of slaves, but along came the concern of the future status of four million newly freed slaves. The United States was divided, and in response, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act of 1867. Even with the best efforts put into the Reconstruction Act of 1867, it ultimately failed in its quest and ended ten years after in 1877. What remained was the issue regarding the status of African Americans and the South’s economy. Reconstruction failed because many white Americans still believed that African Americans were inferior to them. Congressman Boyer, said, “But it is not the complexion of the Negro that degrades him . . . [the Negro is] a race by nature inferior in mental caliber . . . the Negroes are not the equals of white Americans, and are not entitled . . . to participate in the Government of this country . . .” This idea of inferiority even exceeded to create the Ku Klux Klan, a violent group of white Americans against the idea of equality for freedmen. The Ku Klux Klan was …show more content…

In a sense, Congress allowed the racist ideology to survive as they allowed numerous actions to continue to categorize African Americans in a different mindset and viewpoint. In Black Reconstruction in America, written by Dr. W. E. B. Dubois, it exposes the idea that African Americans who wished to have political power had to give up any chance for a job. Congress was unable to do anything to white Americans who intimidated African Americans that wished to vote, hold office, and other basic civil rights. This gave African Americans a choice between having an income to survive or to be part of political events, which basically did not give African Americans a choice at

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