Reflection On Reconstruction

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The Civil War was at most one of the darkest hours in United States history. Bloodshed and loss quaked the land of our forefathers in a way we could not imagine. In the wake of the battles, the Union forces found new hope in their victories and came out on top in the victory of the war. In the hope to reconstruct the United States Abraham Lincoln proceeded with the new idea of reconstruction. The main idea was to give the freed slaves more rights and try to condone for the sins of the past and present. This was a short-lived initial plan, as the hopes and plans changed when Andrew Johnson took to presidency. His views of reconstruction conflicted towards the reconstruction, and the plan soon was updated to fit the new president’s beliefs. The …show more content…

During my earlier education, I was taught that the Reconstruction was set in place to make the United states once more a whole. The Reconstruction alleviated the rights from all ex-confederate soldiers in various ways. The right to vote, to being able to bear arms. My earlier knowledge was very limited, there was a plethora amount of information taught towards the subject, but did not tell the story in an entirety. A lot of my previous learnings still apply in correlation to the newly broadened learning towards the post-Civil War events. The differences between the learnings of my past to the present is that the Reconstruction was more dark and unfathomable compared to that of what I had previously learned. In an entirety, the reconstruction was intended …show more content…

The main purpose in the gain of civil rights in many activist’s mindsets is that they would acquire more votes if they were to blacks the right to vote. With the ratification of the 14th Amendment, this was proven true and the republicans gained more supporting votes due to this. The Civil Rights movement was not only limited to the black community, it sparked the ever going fire in the hearts of many women to acquire this right. By comparing the knowledge that I had gained through my earlier teachings to that of what I have learned now regarding the Reconstruction it is easy to understand why this would not want to be taught to many students of this era. This was considered one of the darkest hours in American history. The reconstruction did not live up to its name, many believe that it was only a continuation of the war. the casualties grew and new found associations were born out of the aftermath and still never died after they supposedly

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