Took place at the end of the Civil War with the ratification of the 13th amendment (which outlawed slavery in the United State)
Former slaves, now freedmen, were technically free but did not mean they were independent
Many freedmen had no material possessions, money, or formal education
After the war many plantations were left abandoned by their former owners
The government took control of these abandoned plantations
The plantations were not given to the slaves that had worked the land
The land was leased (rented) to white planters and investors from the North
One African American newspaper: 'The slaves had been made into "serfs" by the white northerners who'd freed them'
In early 1865, Union General Sherman held a conference in Savannah, Georgia
1. With African-American church leaders and former slaves
2. They told Sherman that the one thing they would need to protect their freedom and to start a new life for themselves was land
Four days later Sherman issued Special Field Order #15
1. Sections of land from South Carolina down to Florida to be set aside for settlement of black families
2. Ban on settlement in those specifically listed areas by white families (only US military personnel allowed to enter)
3. Up to 40 acres of farmable land near a water channel with the protection of the military until the owners can protect themselves
The order was a short-lived promise for Blacks
U.S. president Andrew Johnson overturned Sherman's directive in the fall of 1865, after the war had ended, and returned most of the land along the South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida coasts to the planters who had originally owned it
Freedmen's Bureau
An agency dedicated to assisting former-slaves acquire education, health care, food, clothing and shelter
Between 1865 and 1870, the Freedmen's Bureau had spent $5 million on education alone
The Freedmen's Bureau built hospitals and sent doctors to help former slaves
The Bureau helped to reunite families that had been separated through slave trade
The Bureau also tried to help former slaves acquire land and to build new homes
14th Amendment
Proposed by the Republican Congress in 1866, stated that all people born in the United States were citizens and had the same rights, and granted equal protection under the law
Initially, southern states refused to support the 14th Amendment (as did President Andrew Johnson)
The Republican Congress reacted by passing the Reconstruction Acts of 1867
1. Dividing the south into 5 military districts, each to be controlled by an army commander
2. Stated that southern states must ratify the 14th Amendment to be readmitted back into the Union
The 14th Amendment was ratified a short time later in 1868
15th Amendment
Ratified in 1870, stated that U.S. citizens could not be stopped from voting on the basis of "race, color or previous condition of servitude"
The 15th Amendment did not extend voting rights to women
Immediately after the Civil War, African-Americans were able to participate in the democratic process
Former-slaves were elected to southern state legislatures and to Congress
Hiram Revels and Blanche Bruce of Mississippi became the first African-Americans elected to the U.S. Senate
Twenty African-Americans were elected to the House of Representatives (from South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama and other Confederate states)
In 1866 African Americans used their political power to help pass the first Civil Rights Act of 1866 which banned exclusion of African-Americans from hotels, theaters, railroads and other public places
During the early part of the Reconstruction Era, the country seemed like a much better place for freedmen
If former-slaves hoped to defend these newly acquired rights on their own, they would need land
Owning land would give them financial independence from wealthy, white southerners
Without financial independence, the freedmen would still have to rely on whites for food, clothing, and shelter
Sharecropping
A system under which a worker rented a plot of land from a wealthy landowner, the landowner provided workers with tools, seed and housing, and when the harvest came, the landowners would take a portion of the crops as labor
Sharecropping caused many problems
Renters wanted to grow food to feed their families, but landowners wanted the renters to grow cash crops like cotton and tobacco
Landowners had final say in determining what crops would be grown
Renters then had to buy food from stores (usually owned by the same people who owned the land)
This meant that sharecroppers were very dependent on landowners and could not exercise much freedom
Most southerners did not believe in racial equality and they did not want the federal government to establish laws that granted equal rights to African Americans
They were angered by the Civil Rights law, the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments and by the actions of the Freedmen's Bureau