Reconstruction (U.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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Instead, Congress began a lengthy debate over Reconstruction policy.
The program eventually enacted resulted from a series of compromises among Republicanfactions; the Radicals were never powerful enough to gain everything they sought.
Still, fueled by anger at the president's refusal to compromise and at the appearanceof former Confederates returning to power throughout the South, members of Congress moved increasingly toward the Radicals.
The key Reconstruction measuresenacted aimed to produce far more sweeping changes in the former Confederacy than had appeared likely at the war's end.
Instrumental in convincing Republicans that it was futile to seek a compromise with the president were his vetoes in early 1866 of two measures that won overwhelmingRepublican support and were eventually enacted over his vetoes.
The first of these was the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, which continued the agency's operations for anotheryear.
The second was the Civil Rights Bill, which extended citizenship to blacks by defining all persons born in the United States as citizens.
In denouncing thesemeasures as illegal interference within the states by the federal government, Johnson clung to basic Democratic beliefs rooted in a pre-Civil War vision of states' rights,weak central government, and white supremacy.
The heart of the Reconstruction plan was laid out in two measures: the 14th Amendment to the Constitution and the Reconstruction Act.
The 14th Amendment waspassed in June 1866 and ratified in 1868.
It was designed to protect the rights of Southern blacks and restrict the political power of former Confederates.
It added intothe Constitution the definition of U.S.
citizenship that was enacted in the Civil Rights Bill; barred states from abridging “the privileges or immunities of citizens” ordepriving “any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law”; encouraged Southern states to allow blacks to vote, without actually requiring it, byreducing the congressional representation of states that disfranchised male citizens; barred former officials who had rebelled against the Union from holding publicoffice; and repudiated both Confederate war debts and claims of former slaveholders to compensation for the loss of their slaves.
The Reconstruction Act was passed in March 1867 over President Johnson's veto and was strengthened by three supplemental acts passed later the same year and in1868.
It provided for the organization of loyal governments in all former Confederate states except Tennessee, which, having ratified the 14th Amendment, wasregarded as already reconstructed.
The ten remaining states were divided into five military districts, each headed by a military commander.
The military commanderwas responsible for seeing that each state under his command wrote a new constitution that provided for voting rights for all adult males, regardless of race.
Only whenthe state had ratified its new constitution and the 14th Amendment would the process of political reorganization be complete.
Congressional Reconstruction activity continued after 1867.
Among the most important acts were the impeachment proceedings against President Johnson, who in 1868was spared conviction and removal from office by one vote in the Senate.
Republicans in Congress disapproved of Johnson's dismissal of radical politicians and generalsactive in Reconstruction, and felt that he was obstructing implementation of the government's Reconstruction policy.
In 1869 Congress passed the 15th Amendment tothe Constitution, which was ratified in 1870.
It broadened the 14th Amendment's protection of black suffrage by providing that no citizen could be denied the right tovote on the basis of “race, color or previous condition of servitude.” Another important act was the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which barred discrimination by hotels,theaters, and railroads.
In 1883, however, it was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States.
Despite this continuing legislative activity, thebasic course of Reconstruction was set with the passage of the Reconstruction Act in March 1867.
Although this course constituted a major new departure for both theSouth and the country as a whole, it represented a compromise carefully pieced together by competing factions in Congress rather than a total Radical victory.
RadicalRepublicans lacked the political power to secure two of their most cherished goals: redistribution of plantation lands to former slaves and poor whites, and a prolongedfederal supervision of the former Confederate states.
According to the Reconstruction compromise, those states would be required to provide equal civil and politicalrights to blacks, but once they complied with those requirements, the states would be free to govern themselves.
III IMPLEMENTATION OF RECONSTRUCTION
As Reconstruction was implemented, an intense struggle was underway in the South over the nature of the new social order.
On opposite sides were the freed people(former slaves), who sought to make sure that the freedom they now enjoyed included more than token benefits, and their former owners, who sought to preserve asmany of their old privileges as possible.
Many, although not all, whites who had not owned slaves also found it difficult to imagine a society in which blacks had the samerights as they did.
Representatives of the federal government, including army officers and Freedmen's Bureau officials, typically took a position between the two sides.These representatives insisted that blacks be treated as free people with the same legal rights as whites, but they often found it difficult to understand, let aloneendorse, all the aspirations of the freed people.
At the heart of these aspirations was the desire to get as far from slavery as possible.
Determined to make freedom real, freed people resisted relationships reminiscentof slave-like dependence, for example working under overseers, and struggled to maximize their social autonomy.
Well before the establishment of the new stategovernments mandated by the Reconstruction Act, black Southerners made it clear that they were determined not to accept the establishment of a system in whichthey would be free in name but slave in fact.
Although they did not achieve all of their goals, the freed people were successful in securing some of the independence they sought.
In the process, they also forcedfundamental changes in Southern social relations.
In the crucial area of labor relations, these changes included the speedy disappearance throughout most of the Southof elements of supervised control, such as slave quarters, gang labor, and overseers, that had characterized life under slavery.
Instead, many blacks became familyfarmers, often working land they rented through various sharecropping arrangements.
Meanwhile, unwilling to be second-class members of white churches, most blacksseceded from those institutions and set up their own black churches, headed by black ministers.
Throughout the South, blacks eagerly sought the educationalopportunities that had been denied to them as slaves, and enthusiastically supported numerous freed people's schools opened by Northern philanthropic organizations,often with Freedmen's Bureau assistance.
From 1865 to 1867, freed people struggled for their rights in a hostile political environment.
Beginning in 1867, that environment changed substantially, as one stateafter another, in conformity with the Reconstruction Act, rewrote its laws to provide for black suffrage.
The result was the establishment in the Southern states of newReconstruction governments dominated by the Republican Party.
A Republican State Governments
These Republican governments, which varied from state to state in composition, accomplishments, and endurance, were based on shaky coalitions of three maingroups.
The smallest, although its members often occupied key government positions, were Northerners called carpetbaggers; these were frequently, although notalways, Freedmen's Bureau officials or other army officers who entered Southern politics.
More numerous were the so-called scalawags, the minority of Southern whiteswho, whether out of principle or pragmatism, supported the Reconstruction process.
(Both “carpetbaggers” and “scalawag” were originally terms of derision used bypolitical opponents, but are now widely used by historians in a neutral sense.)
By far the most important participants in the Republican coalitions, however, were Southern blacks.
Firmly committed to the party of Lincoln, blacks provided the bulk ofRepublican votes.
They were increasingly active in Republican Party politics, and served at almost every level of government, from the U.S.
Congress (two senators and14 representatives) to state legislatures, city councils, and county commissions.
In general, black officeholders were more numerous in the Deep South than in theupper South, and more prevalent in state and local than in national government.
The largest number of black officeholders was in South Carolina, where throughoutReconstruction they formed a majority in the state house of representatives.
Although elsewhere in the South blacks did not hold political office in numbers equal totheir proportion of the population, the image of blacks helping to govern states that had until recently held them in bondage was an indication of the changes that had.
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Liens utiles
- C.E. 13 juill. 1956, SECRÉTAIRE D'ÉTAT A LA RECONSTRUCTION ET AU LOGEMENT c. PIETON-GUIBOUT et OFFICE PUBLIC D'HABITATION A LOYERS MODÉRÉS DU DÉPARTEMENT DE LA SEINE, Rec. 338, concl. Chardeau
- Un souvenir est-il la simple reviviscence d’un état antérieur de la conscience ou la reconstruction intellectuelle de cet état?
- Le souvenir est-il une réapparition ou une reconstruction mentale du passé ?
- Le souvenir est-il une réapparition ou une reconstruction mentale du passé ?
- USA: CERTITUDES ET HÉSITATIONS DE LA RECONSTRUCTION (1945-1960)