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American History: Beginnings to 1877: 9. The Reconstruction Era, Lessons 1–4

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  1. freedman
    a person who has been released from enslavement
    Almost overnight, there was a new class of nearly four million people known as freedmen—men and women who had been freed from slavery.
  2. reconstruction
    the activity of building something again
    The era following the Civil War became known as Reconstruction, or the physical, political, and social rebuilding of the South.
  3. amnesty
    a warrant granting release from punishment for an offense
    Lincoln's plan also offered amnesty, or government pardon, to Confederates who swore loyalty to the Union.
  4. amendment
    a statement that is added to a proposal or document
    Each state also had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, which banned slavery throughout the nation.
  5. alternative
    serving or used in place of another
    In 1864, they passed an alternative plan, the Wade-Davis Bill.
  6. intervene
    get involved, so as to alter or hinder an action
    The Thirteenth Amendment gave Congress the power to intervene, and later to pass additional legislation protecting civil rights.
  7. radical
    markedly new or introducing extreme change
    When President Johnson ignored the report, members of Congress called Radical Republicans vowed to take control of Reconstruction.
  8. impeach
    charge with an offense committed while in office
    On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach, or bring formal charges against, Johnson.
  9. capability
    the quality of being able to do something
    Republicans believed that freedmen would have the capability to defend their rights if they could vote.
  10. imposition
    the act of enforcing something
    Many southerners bitterly resented the imposition of military rule.
  11. scalawag
    (history) a Southerner who supported Reconstruction policies
    They called white southern Republicans scalawags, a word used for small, scruffy horses.
  12. carpetbagger
    an outsider who seeks power or success presumptuously
    Southerners jested that these northerners were in such a hurry to move south that they had time only to fling a few clothes into carpetbags, a type of cheap suitcase. They became known as carpetbaggers.
  13. notorious
    known widely and usually unfavorably
    Some white southerners formed secret societies to help them regain power. The most notorious was the Ku Klux Klan, or KKK.
  14. sharecropper
    a tenant farmer who owes a portion of each harvest for rent
    During Reconstruction, many freedmen and poor whites became sharecroppers on plantations. As sharecroppers, they rented and farmed a plot of land in exchange for a share of the crop at harvest time.
  15. anticipate
    regard something as probable or likely
    To many freedmen, sharecropping offered a measure of independence. Many anticipated owning their own land one day.
  16. employ
    put into service
    At the same time, they employed violence in order to prevent African Americans from voting.
  17. compromise
    an accommodation in which both sides make concessions
    Southern Democrats could have fought the decision. Instead, they agreed to support the commission's decision in return for a promise by Hayes to end Reconstruction. This agreement is known as the Compromise of 1877.
  18. specifically
    in distinction from others
    Many of these laws specifically intended to prevent African Americans from voting.
  19. poll tax
    an amount to be paid as a requirement for voting
    Over time, many southern states passed poll taxes, requiring voters to pay a fee each time they voted.
  20. grandfather clause
    an exemption to a rule based on prior circumstances
    To increase the number of white voters, states passed grandfather clauses. These laws stated that if a voter's father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 1867—a date after Johnson restored rebels' right to vote—the voter did not have to take a literacy test.
  21. segregation
    a social system that provides different facilities for minority groups
    After 1877, segregation, or separation of races, became the law of the South.
Created on Fri Jun 25 11:12:53 EDT 2021 (updated Tue Jun 29 12:34:03 EDT 2021)

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