Main Ideas:
1.
Sectionalism and the issue of slavery tore the nation apart
Material Covered:
1.
Growth of Sectionalism
a.
Attempts at Compromise: Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850,
Kansas-Nebraska Act
b.
Legal Position: Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision;
Lincoln-Douglas debates
c.
Increasing Violence: Bleeding Kansas, John Brown’s Raid
d.
Election of Lincoln
2.
Civil War
a.
Causes: political, economic, social
b.
Northern-Southern advantages and disadvantages
c.
Military Strategy and significant battles: Sumter, Gettysburg, &
Antietnam
d.
Civil Rights
i.
Emancipation Proclamation
ii.
Gettysburg Address
iii.
Role of African-Americans
e.
Results
i.
North: industrial Growth, international trade, increase in immigration,
Homestead Act
ii.
South: end of plantation economy, sharecropping, tenant farming, New
South, segregation
Reconstruction (1865 – 1877)
Main Ideas:
- The
south had to re-built after the civil war.
- Radical
republicans attempted to protect former slaves in the south.
- Federal
legislation improved the condition of freedmen only temporarily.
Material Covered:
- Lincoln’s
and Johnson’s plans vs. Congress’ Radical Reconstruction plan
- Secretary
of war: Edward Stanton, Tenure of Office Act, Impeachment
- Congressional
(Military) Reconstruction implemented
- Black
codes, Freedmen’s Bureau, Carpetbaggers, Scalawags
- Amendment
14 and 15: Supreme Court and the Civil Rights Cases (1883)
- The
New South
- Slave
Labor replaced by sharecropping, tenant farming, segregation
- New
industrial development: Tobacco, steel, textiles
- Solid
South: Southern Whites, primarily Democratic regains control
- The
“End” of Reconstruction
- Disputed
election of 1876 + Hayes – Tilden election: Compromise: withdraw of
troops
- Erosion
of political gains of the Freedmen: Literacy Tests, poll taxes, Jim Crow
Laws (Plessy vs. Ferguson)