U. S. History I the Shaping of North America



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Civil War

Battle of Antietam

Battle of Gettysburg

Major Events of the Civil War


First Battle of Bull Run

Appomattox Courthouse

Outlines the South (doing well in the beginning, reach a plateau, and then they start to lose)



  1. First Battle of Bull Run

[July 21, 1861] Manassas Junction, VA

  • Union expected this to be a very short war – only expected this battle

  • influential people come and watch

  • Confederates start to retreat, but Stonewall Jackson tries to rally the Confederates

  • results in a Confederate victory

Significance: proves this will not be a short war

  1. Battle of the Iron-sides [Monitor vs. Merrimac (VA)]

  • iron-plated ships – [March 1862] five days

  • results in a draw

Significance: changes naval warfare – no more wooden ships

  1. Capture of New Orleans – by David Farrogut [April 1862]

  2. Peninsula Campaign – Confederate victory

  3. Second Battle of Bull Run – Confederate victory

  4. Battle of Antietam – First battle fought on the Union side

[September 17, 1862] Antietam Creek, MD

  • bloodiest day of the Civil War

  • battle ends in a draw – 23 000 casualties

  • political victory for the Union

  1. Great Britain decides not to interfere

  2. Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation

-states that slaves in “areas of rebellion” (Confederacy) are free

-does not anger the Border States

-Confederacy does not listen


  1. Fredericksburg, VA [December 1862] – Confederate victory

  2. Chancellorsville, VA [May 1863]

  • Confederate victory, but Stonewall Jackson was killed

  • Jackson was killed by his own men, who mistook him to be a Union soldier

  1. Battle of Gettysburg [July 1-3, 1863] (PA)

    • goes back and forth for three days

    • on the third day, Confederate general George Pickett leads an unsuccessful charge at Union lines – “Pickett’s Charge” – battle ends

Significance: marks beginning of the end for the Confederacy

  1. Battle of Vicksburg [July 4, 1863]

  • Gives Union control of the Mississippi River

  • Named Ulysses Simpson Grant head of the Union Army

-believed in “total war”

-did not believe in defeat

-actually fought in battles


  1. March to the Sea” [1864 November – 1865 April]

  • William T. Sherman leads it

  • Total destruction through his path

  1. Re-election for Lincoln [November 1864]

  2. Capture of Richmond [April 13, 1865]

  3. Appomattox Courthouse [April 9, 1865] (not a battle)

  • Grant and the Union Army corner Lee at Appomattox, VA

  • Lee surrenders everything to Grant

Significance: marks the end of the Civil War

Election of 1864

North Democrats – split

War Democrats – supported Lincoln

Peace Democrats – did not support Lincoln

-Copperheads were the extreme faction of the Peace Democrats

-led by Clement L. Valandingham

-dropped in the Confederacy



Republicans – Lincoln


Union Party (War democrats + Republicans)

Peace Democrats

Lincoln

George McClellan

    1. million popular votes

217 electoral votes

General for the Union

1.8 million popular votes

22 electoral votes



African-Americans in the Civil War

  • following the Emancipation Proclamation, Africans were accepted into the Union army

  • 216 000 African Americans join the Union military

  • 54th Massachusetts

  • 22 win the Medal of Honor

  • paid less, treated as laborers, forced to fight in segregation

Women in the Civil War

  • Clara Barton – Union nurse – founded the Red Cross

  • Harriet Tubman – Underground Railroad and Union spy

  • Dorothea Dix – superintendent of Union nurses

Foreign Problems

    1. Trent Affair

-Union arrests two Confederate officials on board a British ship

-“Alabama” – British built ship panned by the British subjects offered by:

-sinking 64 Union ships


    1. Irish-Americans – on several occasions a small group of green aimed to attack the Union

    2. France in 1863

-France installs Maximillian on the throne of Mexico

-at end of war, Union threatens France

-France pulls support, and in 1867, Maximillian is killed

Civil War in Conclusion

600 000 Americans were killed during war

400 000 are wounded

-Union – 400 000 die

-Confederation – 200 000 killed

Nation loses an entire generation

Civil money cost approximately $15 billion

South is destroyed

The infrastructure will have to be rebuilt

There are two positives-



  1. Democracy survives

  2. Slavery is ended forever in the U.S.

Reconstruction

-Rebuilding and reforming of the country after the Civil War



  1. Rebuild parts of the South

  2. What do we do with the former slaves?

  3. Jobs for soldiers

  4. Convert factories back to a peacetime economy

  5. How do we deal with the South?

Punish or forgive?

  1. Who decides the course of Reconstruction?

The President, Congress, the people?

*Antebellum – pre-Civil War*



Lincoln

-forgive the South



Radical Republicans

-punish the South

-led by Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner


  1. Lincoln’s Plan

  2. Johnson’s Plan

  3. Congress’ Plan

  4. Military Reconstruction

Lincoln’s Plan [began in 1863]

10% Plan – after 10% of a state’s population took an oath of allegiance, that state could be readmitted to the Union

Southern States had to abide by the 13th Amendment [1865-abolished slavery]

Radical Republicans – pass the Wade-Davis Bill (vetoed by Lincoln)

50% had to take an oath of allegiance

Stronger requirements for the registration of the 13th Amendment
[April 14, 1865] Lincoln attends the play Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theater in D.C.

[April 15, 1865] 7:22 AM Lincoln dies

John Wilkes Booth was eventually captured and killed by federal troops
[March 1865] Freedman’s Bureau (expires in 1872)


  • served as a type of welfare agency for former slaves

  • provide clothing, temporary shelter and try to locate jobs

  • have some success – but are plagued by some problems

  • What was most successful? – EDUCATION – taught over 200 000 former slaves to read and write

Johnson’s Plan (by Andrew Johnson)

-wartime governor of Tennessee

-semi-literate

-racist


-forgiving to the South for the wrong reasons (from the South himself)

  1. 10% Plan

  2. pardons Confederate office holders

  3. Southern states are forced to nullify the acts of secession

  4. Have to ratify the 13th Amendment (abolish slavery)

  5. Repudiate Confederate debts

-the South take advantage of Johnson

What happens?

The Southern States pass “Black codes,” intended to keep the African Americans under slavery


  1. Barred African-Americans from serving on a jury

  2. Barred African-Americans from renting land

  3. African-Americans could be punished for idleness

This forces African-Americans into certain jobs (like working on farms)

Result:


Sharecropping

  • Another form of slavery

  • African-Americans work on Southern farms and work for part of the profits

  • African-Americans are liable for debts

By December 1865, Johnson announces that all Southern states are back in the Union

-the Southern states send representatives to D.C.

-many of the representatives are former Confederate officers and generals

Congress closes the door on these men and takes over Reconstruction



Congress’s Plan [1866]

  1. Civil Rights Bill – 14th Amendment

  1. Full civil rights for African-Americans

  2. Can reduce representatives in Congress if their state blocks African-Americans from voting

  3. Disqualifies Confederate office holders from taking office

  4. Repudiate Confederate debts

  1. the 10% Plan

What happens?

    • Johnson encourages the Southern states to vote against the 14th Amendment

    • The Freedman’s Bureau is extended even though Johnson tried to veto the bill

    • We see a break between Republicans and Radical Republicans over the best way of Reconstruction

Congressional Elections [1866]

-Republicans made up 2/3 majorities in both houses



Military Reconstruction [1867]

-divides the South into five military districts

-in each, is led by a Union general and controlled by Union soldiers

-punishment to the South

-had to ratify the 14th Amendment

-had to grant and ratify the 15th Amendment (gives African Americans the right to vote)

What happens?

Reconstruction of the South is completed by the sword (force)



Realities of Reconstruction

  1. in many Southern states (AL, FL, MS, SC, LA), African-Americans make up the majority, but do not hold the majority in office

  2. Corruption

Carpetbagger – a term used to describe a Northerner who comes to the South after the Civil War, looking for political power

Scalawag – a term used to describe a Southerner who supported the Union during the Civil War



  1. Reform

    1. establishment of adequate schools

    2. improved tax system

    3. public works programs

    4. property rights are guaranteed to women

  2. 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments

-all are designed to protect African-Americans

  1. Formation of Southern “Radical” Groups

-oppose equal rights for African Americans

-Ku Klux Klan-forms in 1866

-terrorized African Americans in the South

-finally brought under control when Congress passes the Force Acts in 1870 and 1871, but they continue to meet and terrorize African Americans

-try to keep African Americans from voting


  1. many African-Americans are restricted from voting

-poll taxes

-literacy test

-Grandfather clause

Andrew Johnson is openly against Congress and their Reconstruction plans [1867] Congress passes the Tenure of Office Act

-makes it illegal for the president to replace an appointed official who was confirmed by Congress

[1868] Johnson fires his Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton (from Lincoln)

-House of Representatives brings impeachment charges against Johnson

-the Senate hears the case and votes on it

-Johnson misses being thrown out of office by one vote

Result:


-would have set a terrible precedent

-would have permanently weakened the office presidency

-makes Johnson a lame duck president [May 1868]

The one bright spot for Johnson’s presidency was seen as a terrible move at the time

[1867] Russia is looking to sell Alaska

-believed that Alaska has been “furred out”

Secretary of State, William Seward, purchases Alaska for $7.2 million

-Met with horrible review – Americans are extremely upset

“Seward’s Folly” “Seward’s Icebox”

Election of 1868

Republicans

Democrats

Ulysses S. Grant

Horatio Seymour

Civil War hero

Political Novice

Waves “the bloody shirt” during campaign


Governor of NY during the Civil War

Against the South

Political Moderate

Ulysses S. Grant wins

-only wins by 300 000 popular votes

-newly voting African-Americans gave him the win

-votes from Virginia, Mississippi and Texas are not counted, since they were not reconstructed yet

Reconstruction continues throughout Grant’s presidency

-as troops pull out of the Southern states, state governments quickly pass back to the hands of the white Democrats

-“A return to home rule” – white redeemers

-once these home-ruled governments take over, they restrict the rights of African-Americans



Grant’s Administration

-has one of the most corrupt presidencies



Grant’s Scandals

  1. The Credit-Mobilier Scandal

Credit-Mobilier was a railroad company set up by the Union Pacific Railroad Company

-they would charge $50 000 for every mile of track built

-it only cost $30 000 for every mile of track at the time

-to keep Congressmen quiet, the Credit-Mobilier company gives them shares of stock

-The Vice President was also bribed – Schuyler Colfax

-Scandal is broken in 1872

-Grant’s administration took the major blame for it


  1. Salary Grab

-Congress votes to double their pay, including a raise for Grant

-after the rage of the public, Congress repeals the decision



  1. Whiskey Ring

-whiskey distillers and members of the U.S. Treasury team up to avoid paying an excise tax on whiskey

-it cheats the federal government out of millions of dollars



  1. W.W. Belknap – Secretary of War

-sells $24 000 worth of government supplies to the Native Americans

-he then keeps the money for himself

-because of this scandal, he eventually resigns

Panic of 1873

Caused by the over-speculation of western lands and RAILROADS

[
Cost insurances $273 million
1871] Chicago fire

[1872] Boston fire

Jay Cooke Company Bank fails – sold bonds to the Union during the Civil War

Leads to a financial panic that lasts for about five years



Election of 1876

Republicans

Democrats

Rutherford B. Hayes

Samuel Tilden

Governor of Ohio

Union General

Moderate in political issues


Lawyer from New York

Brings down Boss Tweed


On election night, the electoral count is 184-Hayes, 165-Tilden

You need 185 electoral votes to win (the majority)

South Carolina, Louisiana, Oregon, and Florida – each sent in two sets of electoral votes

One for Democrats, one for the Republicans

Set up a committee – 7 Democrats, 8 Republicans

Democrats threaten to “filibuster until hell freezes over”

Compromise of 1877

Democrats agree to let Hayes be elected if:



  1. The last federal troops are removed from South Carolina and Louisiana

  2. One southerner is on the Cabinet

  3. Grant political power/favor to the South

  4. Spend federal money on internal improvements

The Republicans, by agreeing to this, the Republicans sell out their commitment to equal rights for African-Americans

-this is going to lead to segregation



After Hayes is sworn in:

One month later, he removes federal troops from South Carolina and Louisiana

Marks the official end of Reconstruction

After Reconstruction Ends

-Southern states return to white Democrat control “white redeemers”

-new “redeemer” governments limit rights for African-Americans

-begin to see segregation

[1880s] the South begins separating the races in public facilities

[1880s] the South passes “Jim Crow laws”

-calls for formal segregation in the South

-enforced through fear and lynchings

[1896] Supreme Court hands down the Plessy vs. Ferguson decision

-Legalizes “separate but equal” facilities in the United States

-For the African-Americans – it meant inferior facilities (ex. Schools)

-Sharecropping becomes the dominant job for many Southern African-Americans

This continues until the mid-1950s

Recapping Reconstruction

Positives:


  • Internal improvements

  • Union is preserved

  • 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments are all passed

  • Reform

-education

-tax system

-rights for women

Negatives


  • Segregation develops

  • Corruption

  • Terror groups

  • Southern states limit the 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments

  • Republicans sell out their commitment to African-Americans

The Gilded Age (of Politics) – on the surface, the U.S. appears to be glittering, growing, and prosperous – in reality, there is economic depression, CORRUPTION, sin, crowds, big business, filth, and crime

*gilded – covered with gold*

Politics – industrialization, frontier, growth of cities

The Gilded Age Presidents “the Forgettable Presidents”


  1. Ulysses S. Grant (first president during this age)

-scandals

-depression (Panic of 1873)



  1. Rutherford B. Hayes

-ends the Reconstruction

-“His Fraudulency” – Compromise of 1877 gets him the presidency

Problems:


    • Great Railway Strike of 1877

-Hayes calls out federal troops to deal with strikes – Baltimore and Pittsburgh

    • Deals with the Panic of 1873

    • Hayes vetoes the Chinese Exclusion Act

-receives backlash and outrage because of this

-it is a law that would limit the number of Chinese immigrants

-cheap labor in California, gold rush in California

Congress passes it the year after Hayes leaves office



Election of 1880

The Republicans were split into the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds

Stalwarts – led by Roscoe Conkling (does not get the NY Port Collectors job he wanted)

-wanted to return to the days of Grant

-VP candidate for the Republicans – Chester A. Arthur (a Stalwart)

Half-Breeds – led by James G. Blaine – secretary of state



Republicans

Democrats

James Garfield

Winfield Hancock

A Half-Breed

Civil war officer

Grew up very poor


Civil War general

James Garfield wins



  1. James Garfield

  • very honest

  • one major flaw – he cannot say “no”

[July 2, 1881] tragedy hits

  • a deranged office-seeker, Charles Guiteau, shoots James Garfield

  • Garfield does not die for 11 weeks

  • brought to New Jersey for some fresh shore air

[September 19, 1881] Garfield dies

  1. Chester A. Arthur

-when he becomes president, many Stalwarts (including Conkling) believe that they will receive political positions

Arthur surprises them – throws his influence into Civil Service Reform (government jobs)

Result: Pendleton Act of 1883 – establishes a merit system for civil service jobs


  • Sets up a Civil Service Commission

  • Requires that applicants pass an exam for certain jobs

[By 1884] Arthur had classified 10% of all government jobs

[By 1984] over 90% of government jobs are classified

Significance: starts Civil Service Reform

Election of 1884 - mudslinging


Republicans

Democrats

James G. Blaine

Grover Cleveland

From Maine – leader of the Half-Breeds

Secretary of State

Linked to corruption on behalf of a Southern Railroad Company – “Burn, burn, burn this letter”

During a campaign speech, a Republican candidate calls the Democrat party “the Party of Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion”

-insults the Irish, who vote Democratic


Mayor of Buffalo

Governor of NY

Lawyer

Bachelor


Linked to an illegitimate child in Buffalo

“Maa, Maa, where’s my Pa?”


Grover Cleveland wins




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