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- “The war destroyed the institution of slavery, ensured the survival of the union, and set in motion economic and political changes that laid the foundation for the modern nation,” wrote Eric Foner, the author of Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution 1863-1877.
www.history.com/news/reconstruction-timeline-stepsReconstruction: A Timeline of the Post‑Civil War Era - HISTORY
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It was about the post-Civil War period and the political resistance, particularly from Southern states, to the newly adopted constitutional amendments abolishing slavery and guaranteeing racial...
- Wartime Reconstruction
- Presidential Reconstruction
- Congressional Reconstruction
- The End of Reconstruction
December 8, 1863: The Ten-Percent Plan Two years into the Civil War in 1863 and nearly a year after signing the Emancipation Proclamation, President Abraham Lincoln announced the Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction or the Ten-Percent Plan, which required 10 percent of a Confederatestate’s voters to pledge an oath of allegiance to the Union t...
May 29, 1865: Andrew Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan President’s Johnson’s Reconstruction plan offered general amnesty to southern white people who pledged a future loyalty to the U.S. government, with the exception of Confederate leaders who would later receive individual pardons. The plan also gave southern whites the power to reclaim property, wit...
March 2, 1867: Reconstruction Act of 1867 The Reconstruction Act of 1867 outlined the terms for readmission to representation of rebel states. The bill divided the former Confederate states, except for Tennessee, into five military districts. Each state was required to write a new constitution, which needed to be approved by a majority of voters—in...
April 24, 1877: Rutherford B. Hayes and the Compromise of 1877 Twelve years after the close of the Civil War, President Rutherford B. Hayespulled federal troops from their posts surrounding the capitals of Louisiana and South Carolina—the last states occupied by the U.S. government. According Foner, Hayes didn’t withdraw the troops as widely believ...
- Farrell Evans
- 2 min
A House Divided: The Road to Civil War, 1850-1861 - The Civil War and Reconstruction with Eric Foner | Sections 1 through 10. https://www.youtube.com/playlis...
Slavery was the most fundamental cause of the Civil War and emancipation, in which blacks played a central role, its most revolutionary outcome. The land issue was crucial to the fate of Reconstruction as was the struggle over control of the labor of emancipated slaves.
Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877 is a historical non-fiction monograph written by American historian Eric Foner. Its broad focus is the Reconstruction Era in the aftermath of the American Civil War, which consists of the social, political, economic, and cultural changes brought about as consequences of the war's outcome.
Oct 13, 2022 · It rested on a number of axioms: slavery had been a benign institution; the Confederacy was a glorious Lost Cause; Reconstruction – the experiment in biracial democracy that followed the Civil War – was a time of misgovernment and corruption; the self-styled Redeemers, who rescued the South from the supposed horrors of ‘Negro rule’ by ...
Dec 15, 2015 · Foner cleared up many misconceptions about Reconstruction’s development and demise. Foner reminded the audience that Reconstruction represented a fundamental shift in thinking about the relationship of the federal government to the people.